fly off the handle
— Verb
– English
~ get very angry and fly into a rage; "The professor combusted when the student didn't know the answer to a very elementary question"; "Spam makes me go ballistic"
fly in the face of
— Verb
– English
~ go against; "This action flies in the face of the agreement"
fit the bill
— Verb
– English
~ be what is needed or be good enough for what is required; "Does this restaurant fit the bill for the celebration?"
foam at the mouth
— Verb
– English
~ be in a state of uncontrolled anger
fly the coop
— Verb
– English
~ flee; take to one's heels; cut and run; "If you see this man, run!"; "The burglars escaped before the police showed up"
fall through
— Verb
– English
~ fail utterly; collapse; "The project foundered"
follow through
— Verb
– English
~ carry a stroke to natural completion after hitting or releasing a ball
follow through
— Verb
– English
~ pursue to a conclusion or bring to a successful issue; "Did he go through with the treatment?"; "He implemented a new economic plan"; "She followed up his recommendations with a written proposal"
forfalde til
— Verb
– Danish
~ vælge en nærliggende og let løsning og blive tilbø ...
fyge 'til
— Verb
– Danish
~ blive dækket helt af sne der fyger
føje til
— Verb
– Danish
~ sige el. skrive noget ud over det allerede sagte e ...
føre tilbage
— Verb
– Danish
~ ændre til den oprindelige tilstand, form, status e ...
fudge together
— Verb
– English
~ produce shoddily, without much attention to detail
fine-tune
— Verb
– English
~ make fine adjustments or divide into marked intervals for optimal measuring; "calibrate an instrument"; "graduate a cylinder"
fine-tune
— Verb
– English
~ improve or perfect by pruning or polishing; "refine one's style of writing"
fine-tune
— Verb
– English
~ adjust finely; "fine-tune the engine"
fuse 'ud
— Verb
– Danish
~ bevæge sig hurtigt ud og væk