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  1. 22 févr. 2017 · They fled over the mountains. They fled northwards. etc. As a transitive verb, the meaning is to run away from + [object], without a preposition: for example. They fled the city. They fled the country. They fled the fighting. etc. So "flee + noun" and "flee from + noun" are both correct, and have the same meaning.

  2. 2. run away or flee sounds like something that refugees do: it's not something that you would want to associate with a paradise resort. escape is probably a good word to use about the daily routine. It suggests freedom, which is a positive idea. get away is similar. There is a significant difference between get away and run away, as explained here.

  3. 2 sept. 2023 · 8. People often write The time flew by when describing a past experience such as an enjoyable holiday. However, you have written it as an exclamation, so the present tense is appropriate. "Time flies" is a general comment on how quickly time seems to pass. Mari-Lou has pointed out that "How time flew" can also be used as an exclamation.

  4. 1 nov. 2020 · run away = flee - usually, but not always escaping. But if you get away you definitely did escape. Breaking away is more often used figuratively to mean parting company with some larger group (leaving a political party, for example) - often with the implication that one will continue to do similar things - just not within that larger group.

  5. It means "when autumn comes." (Not "if.") Checking Google Ngrams, I was surprised by how common 'come [season]' is. 'Come spring' and 'come fall' vastly outnumber 'when ... comes'. 'Come summer' and 'come autumn' outnumber the equivalent and 'when winter comes' is slightly more common than 'come winter'. In each case 'come [season]' has grown ...

  6. to flee someone or something. Share. Improve this answer. Follow edited Jun 16, 2020 at 9:11. Community Bot. 1. answered Mar 11, 2013 at 21:52. Renan Renan. 3,863 2 ...

  7. 10 févr. 2013 · I am looking for a word or expression to mean running out of somewhere very fast because of being terrified of something, or to avoid meeting someone.

  8. 5 févr. 2018 · A person who attends the same college or university as you, from a more technical perspective, should probably be called your collegemate (college is more or less a general term for an institution of higher education, at least, in North America) rather than your schoolmate, but I wouldn't say that this term is common enough that you will ever hear someone actually say it in real life.

  9. Past - ran. Continuous forms with be / gerund / present participle - running. Perfect forms with have / passive forms with be / past participle - run. So you never should say have (been) ran or has (been) ran, it's always have (been) run or has (been) run. That being said you will hear native speakers get it wrong all the time, especially when ...

  10. 15 nov. 2013 · The word from is a prepositional term that is used to mark a starting point in time or space. If your subject was once in prison or if he was once caught by Agent Hanratty, you would state "escaped from" to indicate that the subject, at some specific point in time, "escaped" his existing state of captivity.