🇬🇧 en no 🇳🇴

fly verb

  /flaɪ/
  • (ambitransitive, archaic, poetic) To flee, to escape (from).
  • (transitive, ergative) To cause to fly (travel or float in the air): to transport via air or the like.
fly

fly noun

  /flaɪ/
  • (often plural) A strip of material (sometimes hiding zippers or buttons) at the front of a pair of trousers, pants, underpants, bootees, etc.
gylf, glidelås
  • A piece of canvas that covers the opening at the front of a tent.
gylf

fly noun

  /flaɪ/
  • (non-technical) Especially, any of the insects of the family Muscidae, such as the common housefly (other families of Diptera include mosquitoes and midges).
flue, toving, tovinge
  • (fishing) A lightweight fishing lure resembling an insect.
flue

flying adjective

  /ˈflaɪ.ɪŋ/
  • That flies or can fly.
fjærball

🇬🇧 en no 🇳🇴

elative noun

  /ɪˈleɪtɪv/
  • In Semitic languages, the “adjective degree of superiority.” In some languages such as Arabic, the concepts of comparative and superlative degree of an adjective are merged into a single form, the elative. How this form is understood or translated depends upon context and definiteness. In the absence of comparison, the elative conveys the notion of “greatest”, “supreme.”
elativ

el noun

  /ˈɛl/ , [ɛɫ]
  • The name of the Latin-script letter L/l.
alen