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Definition of flee verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

flee

verb
 
/fliː/
 
/fliː/
[intransitive, transitive, no passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they flee
 
/fliː/
 
/fliː/
he / she / it flees
 
/fliːz/
 
/fliːz/
past simple fled
 
/fled/
 
/fled/
past participle fled
 
/fled/
 
/fled/
-ing form fleeing
 
/ˈfliːɪŋ/
 
/ˈfliːɪŋ/
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  1. to leave a person or place very quickly, especially because you are afraid of possible danger
    • She burst into tears and fled.
    • flee from somebody/something a camp for refugees fleeing from the war
    • flee to…/into… He fled to London after an argument with his family.
    • flee something He was caught trying to flee the country.
    • The driver had already fled the scene of the accident.
    compare fly (13)
    Extra Examples
    • They turned and fled when they saw the gang approaching.
    • When the police arrived the burglars fled empty-handed.
    • She had to flee for her life when soldiers attacked her town.
    • The children fled in terror as the hay caught fire.
    • She dropped the phone and fled from the office.
    • The family managed to flee to safety.
    • They fled to Britain when the war started.
    • All my family fled across the border to safety.
    • He fled into exile and never returned.
    • Hundreds of people were forced to flee their homes.
    Topics Dangerc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • abroad
    • across the border
    • into exile
    verb + flee
    • be forced to
    • have to
    • try to
    preposition
    • from
    • into
    • to
    phrases
    • flee empty-handed
    • flee for your life
    • flee like the wind
    See full entry
    Word OriginOld English flēon, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vlieden and German fliehen.
See flee in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee flee in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
the above
noun
 
 
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