(n.) A man of more appearance of wit than reality.
(n.) A large sparoid fish of the Atlantic coast and all tropical seas (Lobotes Surinamensis).
(n.) The European red-backed shrike (Lanius collurio); -- called also flusher.
Example Sentences:
(1) There was a TV movie in 1981, followed by a TV series, which ran from 1982 to 1988; the characters would race around New York City , running up stairs, down stairs, arresting perps, rolling their eyes at flashers, wielding guns when absolutely necessary.
(2) "Flashers" and "heavy breathers" were so much a part of the fabric of the culture that they were a running joke, part of "the dirty mac brigade" who were really to be pitied.
(3) It wouldn't apply to posting a picture of a flasher on a website to warn others.
(4) The vice-chairman of the National Disaster Management Authority recently gained the right to a red light "with flasher" though the eight "members" of the authority will have to make do with lights "without flasher".
(5) Detailed instructions for the packing of the adsorption tube and the operation of the thermal concentrator (flasher) are given.
(6) 32:1404-1411, 1988; N. Düzgüneş, D. A. Ashtekar, D. L. Flasher, N. Ghori, R. J. Debs, D. S. Friend, and P. R. J. Gangadharam, J. Infect.
(7) He’s an unswerving non-driver: “When I was growing up in the Wairarapa we couldn’t afford a car and then I got to Wellington and didn’t need a car.” We are talking at Deluxe, the boho cafe where his fellow Conchord Bret McKenzie used to work – between the dilapidated artists’ joint the duo once shared and the “flasher” home where Clement now lives with his wife, Miranda, and son, Sophocles Iraia.
(8) The act takes a much tougher line on "flashers" and "peeping toms".
(9) The adsorbent was packed in stainless steel column of a suitable size, and the adsorbed vapours were released by heating in the flasher then analysed by gas chromatography.
(10) Observations were made of 57 drivers who approached a rural rail grade crossing in the presence of activated warning flashers signalling an approaching train.
Flusher
Definition:
(n.) A workman employed in cleaning sewers by flushing them with water.
(n.) The red-backed shrike. See Flasher.
Example Sentences:
(1) This study of male current drinkers showed that typical flushers drank less alcohol than did atypical and nonflushers, but there was no observed difference between the drinking patterns of atypical flushers and nonflushers.
(2) However, this study demonstrated that cultural factors such as embarrassment also contribute to lower alcohol consumption by flushers.
(3) The relative concentrations of ethanol and acetaldehyde in blood and that of acetate in alcohol metabolism could be summarized as follows: 7500 (15 mM): 1-3 (2-5 microM); 250-400 (0.5-0.8 mM) for non-flushers; and 7500 (15 mM): 5-10 (10-20 microM): 250-400 (0.5-0.8 mM) for a flusher.
(4) Ethanol concentrations of flushers and nonflushers were similar.
(5) Chlorpropamide alcohol flushers appeared to be more sensitive to ethanol.
(6) This study examined whether lower consumption of alcohol among flushers was correlated with cultural factors such as embarrassment over flushing as well as with biological factors among Japanese in Japan and Japanese-Americans using data from a joint Japan-U.S. collaborative survey.
(7) The mean alcohol intake differed significantly between groups: (1) habitat--Japanese versus Japanese-Americans, (2) flushing status--flushers versus nonflushers, and (3) embarrassment about flushing.
(8) Lower alcohol consumption by flushers than by nonflushers has been attributed to differences in physiological reactions to alcohol.
(9) The effects of ethanol and subsequent administration of intravenous naloxone were studied in double-blind, placebo-controlled fashion with a group of six male chlorpropamide alcohol flushers (CPAF) and a group of 13 nonflushing males.
(10) In the non-flushers, on the contrary, no significant increase was observed.
(11) My day as a 'flusher' in the London sewers Read more Back at the surface, Paris’s familiar hustle and bustle suddenly feels like an aggression.
(12) So if you see a flusher emerging from a sewer near you (with or without a python), do say thanks rather than moaning about your blocked toilet or the size of your water bill.
(13) In the flushers, significant increases in the blood acetaldehyde (AcH) level, skin temperature and pulse rate were found.
(14) The percentage of flushers was 68.6% of males and 41.9% of females, non-flushers 18.3%, 11.2%, and unknowns 13.1%, 46.9%, respectively.
(15) We found that "flushers" are found exclusively among subjects without ALDH I, and that their blood levels of acetaldehyde were significantly higher than those of "non-flushers" within 10 min after the block.
(16) There was no difference between the flushers and the non-flushers concerning the change in the blood ethanol (EtOH) level nor the change of P1 and P2 latencies in photopalpebral reflex (PPR).
(17) Flushers are genetically less able to tolerate alcohol than nonflushers and are less likely to become alcoholics.
(18) Since endogenous opiates and prostaglandins may be mediators of flushing syndromes, we attempted to block EIF in four Asian flushers with single doses of either the opiate antagonist nalmefene, or the prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor indomethacin.
(19) Lucky you didn’t faint,” says Vince Minney, who has been a flusher for 26 years.
(20) We determined by means of hybridization of genomic DNA samples with allele specific oligonucleotide probes, genotypes of the ADH2 and ALDH2 loci in Japanese alcohol flushers and nonflushers.