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flow
noun as in issue, abundance
Strong matches
breeze, continuance, continuation, continuity, course, current, deluge, draft, draw, dribble, drift, ebb, effusion, electricity, emanation, flux, gush, juice, oozing, outpouring, plenty, plethora, progression, river, run, sequence, series, spate, spout, spurt, succession, train
verb as in issue, surge, run out
Strongest matches
cascade, circulate, continue, discharge, ebb, flood, glide, gush, leak, overflow, percolate, pour, proceed, rush, slide, spill, splash, stream, sweep, swell, swirl, trickle, tumble
Strong matches
abound, arise, brim, course, deluge, dribble, emanate, emerge, emit, exudate, exude, gurgle, inundate, jet, move, ooze, pass, progress, pullulate, regurgitate, result, ripple, roll, sluice, spew, spring, spurt, sputter, squirt, teem, void
Weak matches
Example Sentences
“I felt the moment I stepped in, on bars, to raise my hands again to compete,” Rosen said, “I felt like I was back in my zone. I felt the flow.”
But sabotage on a small level is never going to disrupt our vast information flow.
Early indications suggest that, despite Min Aung Hlaing's plea to the international community, the embattled junta leader is unlikely to prioritise the unfettered flow of humanitarian aid.
But this is economic sleight-of-hand: tariffs impact macroeconomic trade flow, while opioid costs are microeconomic and mostly internalized losses — these are not comparable categories.
The water flows in aqueducts and canals to desert farmlands and cities from Palm Springs to San Diego.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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