flush
verb /flʌʃ/
  /flʌʃ/
 Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they flush |    /flʌʃ/   /flʌʃ/  | 
| he / she / it flushes |    /ˈflʌʃɪz/   /ˈflʌʃɪz/  | 
| past simple flushed |    /flʌʃt/   /flʌʃt/  | 
| past participle flushed |    /flʌʃt/   /flʌʃt/  | 
| -ing form flushing |    /ˈflʌʃɪŋ/   /ˈflʌʃɪŋ/  | 
- [intransitive, transitive] (of a person or their face) to become red, especially because you are embarrassed, angry or hot; to make somebody's face become red
- She flushed with anger.
 - + adj. Sam felt her cheeks flush red.
 - flush something A rosy blush flushed her cheeks.
 
Extra ExamplesTopics Feelingsc2- He flushed scarlet with embarrassment.
 - He made his excuses, flushing guiltily.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- deeply
 - a little
 - slightly
 - …
 
- in
 - with
 
- flush red, scarlet, etc.
 
 - [intransitive, transitive] flush (something) when a toilet flushes or you flush it, water passes through it to clean it, after a handle, etc. has been pressed                                     
 - [transitive] to clean something by causing water to pass through it
- flush something out (with something) Flush the pipe out with clean water.
 - flush something through something Flush clean water through the pipe.
 
 - [transitive] flush something + adv./prep. to get rid of something with a sudden flow of water or other liquid
- They flushed the drugs down the toilet.
 - Drinking lots of water will help to flush toxins out of the body.
 - Gallons of toxic waste were flushed into the sea.
 
 - [transitive] flush somebody/something + adv./prep. to force a person or an animal to leave the place where they are hiding
- They're trying to flush him out of hiding.
 - Hunters are allowed to use dogs to flush foxes from their hiding places.
 
 
Word Originverb Middle English (in the sense ‘move rapidly, spring up’, especially of a bird ‘fly up suddenly’): symbolic, fl- frequently beginning words connected with sudden movement; perhaps influenced by flash and blush.