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Flying fox   /flˈaɪɪŋ fɑks/   Listen
adjective
Flying  adj.  Moving in the air with, or as with, wings; moving lightly or rapidly; intended for rapid movement.
Flying army (Mil.) a body of cavalry and infantry, kept in motion, to cover its own garrisons and to keep the enemy in continual alarm.
Flying artillery (Mil.), artillery trained to rapid evolutions, the men being either mounted or trained to spring upon the guns and caissons when they change position.
Flying bridge, Flying camp. See under Bridge, and Camp.
Flying buttress (Arch.), a contrivance for taking up the thrust of a roof or vault which can not be supported by ordinary buttresses. It consists of a straight bar of masonry, usually sloping, carried on an arch, and a solid pier or buttress sufficient to receive the thrust. The word is generally applied only to the straight bar with supporting arch.
Flying colors, flags unfurled and waving in the air; hence:
To come off with flying colors, to be victorious; to succeed thoroughly in an undertaking.
Flying doe (Zool.), a young female kangaroo.
Flying dragon.
(a)
(Zool.) See Dragon, 6.
(b)
A meteor. See under Dragon.
Flying Dutchman.
(a)
A fabled Dutch mariner condemned for his crimes to sail the seas till the day of judgment.
(b)
A spectral ship.
Flying fish. (Zool.) See Flying fish, in the Vocabulary.
Flying fox (Zool.), see Flying fox in the vocabulary.
Flying frog (Zool.), either of two East Indian tree frogs of the genus Rhacophorus (Rhacophorus nigrapalmatus and Rhacophorus pardalis), having very large and broadly webbed feet, which serve as parachutes, and enable it to make very long leaps.
Flying gurnard (Zool.), a species of gurnard of the genus Cephalacanthus or Dactylopterus, with very large pectoral fins, said to be able to fly like the flying fish, but not for so great a distance. Note: Three species are known; that of the Atlantic is Cephalacanthus volitans.
Flying jib (Naut.), a sail extended outside of the standing jib, on the flying-jib boom.
Flying-jib boom (Naut.), an extension of the jib boom.
Flying kites (Naut.), light sails carried only in fine weather.
Flying lemur. (Zool.) See Colugo.
Flying level (Civil Engin.), a reconnoissance level over the course of a projected road, canal, etc.
Flying lizard. (Zool.) See Dragon, n. 6.
Flying machine, any apparatus for navigating through the air, especially a heavier-than-air machine. Flying mouse (Zool.), the opossum mouse (Acrobates pygmaeus), a marsupial of Australia. Called also feathertail glider. Note: It has lateral folds of skin, like the flying squirrels, and a featherlike tail. Flying party (Mil.), a body of soldiers detailed to hover about an enemy. Flying phalanger (Zool.), one of several species of small marsuupials of the genera Petaurus and Belideus, of Australia and New Guinea, having lateral folds like those of the flying squirrels. The sugar squirrel (Belideus sciureus), and the ariel (Belideus ariel), are the best known; called also squirrel petaurus and flying squirrel. See Sugar squirrel. Flying pinion, the fly of a clock. Flying sap (Mil.), the rapid construction of trenches (when the enemy's fire of case shot precludes the method of simple trenching), by means of gabions placed in juxtaposition and filled with earth. Flying shot, a shot fired at a moving object, as a bird on the wing. Flying spider. (Zool.) See Ballooning spider. Flying squid (Zool.), an oceanic squid (Ommastrephes Bartramii syn. Sthenoteuthis Bartramii), abundant in the Gulf Stream, which is able to leap out of the water with such force that it often falls on the deck of a vessel. Flying squirrel (Zool.) See Flying squirrel, in the Vocabulary. Flying start, a start in a sailing race in which the signal is given while the vessels are under way. Flying torch (Mil.), a torch attached to a long staff and used for signaling at night.



noun
Flying fox  n.  (Zool.)
1.
A fruit bat of the genus Pteropus, which has a head resembling that of a fox.
2.
The colugo.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Flying fox" Quotes from Famous Books



... Finke, Mount. Fish River. Fitzgerald River. Fitzmaurice River. Fitzroy River. Fletcher's Creek. Flinders Range. Flinders River. Flood's Creek. Flying Fox Creek. Fortescue River. Fossilbrook. Fowler's Bay. Frances, Lake. Fraser's Range. Fremantle. Freeling, Mount. Frew's ...
— The Explorers of Australia and their Life-work • Ernest Favenc

... native dog (which is a smaller species of the wolf), the wombat, bandicoot, kangaroo-rat, opossum, flying squirrel, flying fox, etc. etc." ...
— A Dictionary of Austral English • Edward Morris

... not think it would come to war here. He showed me a large pistol fastened round his waist by a cartridge belt, and tried to shoot a flying bat with it, but failed. Simile told me that the vampire bat, or flying fox, as they call it here, is good to eat, but I do not think I could eat bat. My lady pig from Sydney is at Apia, but as she only cost thirty-seven shillings I feel doubts as to her quality. Still, in Samoa a pig's ...
— The Life of Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson • Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez

... and cannibal Fijians were no exceptions to the general rule, for Dr. Seemann wrote me word that they make pets of the flying fox (bat), the lizard, and parroquet. Captain Wilkes, in his exploring expedition (ii. 122), says the pigeon in the Samoon islands "is commonly kept as a plaything, and particularly by the chiefs. One of our officers unfortunately on one occasion ...
— Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development • Francis Galton

... Creek. Finke, Mount. Fish River. Fitzgerald River. Fitzmaurice River. Fitzroy River. Fletcher's Creek. Flinders Range. Flinders River. Flood's Creek. Flying Fox Creek. Fortescue River. Fossilbrook. Fowler's Bay. Frances, Lake. Fraser's Range. Fremantle. Freeling, Mount. Frew's Pond. Frew River. ...
— The Explorers of Australia and their Life-work • Ernest Favenc

... Bats Flying Fox, Pteropus Edwardsii Their numbers at Peradenia Singularity of their attitudes Food and mode of eating Horse-shoe bat, Rhinolophus Faculty of smell in bat A tiny bat, Scotophilus foromandelicus Extraordinary parasite of ...
— Sketches of the Natural History of Ceylon • J. Emerson Tennent



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