0 to make a series of quick delicate movements up and down or from side to side, or to cause something to do this:
1 If your heart or stomach flutters, you feel slightly uncomfortable because you are excited or nervous:
2 a short period of excited activity:
The publication of her first novel last spring caused a flutter of excitement.
4 a quick up-and-down movement
5 to move in quick, irregular motions, or to cause something to move this way:
7 a small amount of money that someone risks on a bet or investment:
take/have a flutter on sth Many people nowadays take a flutter on commodities and foreign exchange.
Though it was adopted energetically, its real impact eventually proved negligible, except for an initial flutter of activity.
Superimposed in three tracks or layers, the continuing pitches create a world of rich, vibrating, fluttering sounds.
There were 3 episodes of recurrent atrial fibrillation or flutter; antiarrhythmic agents restored sinus rhythm in all.
Atrial flutter and sinus nodal dysfunction in this patient, however, correlated with cardiac enlargement and tricuspid regurgitation.
In conclusion, radiofrequency catheter ablation is an effective treatment of atrial flutter after surgery for congenital heart defects in young patients.
Junctional tachychardia and atrial flutter are successfully treated by radio-frequency ablation (42).
Of the fetuses, 300 had arrhythmias, 34 of them supraventricular tachyarrhythmias; 15 patients with atrial flutter were selected for presentation.
The previously reported patient with asymptomatic atrial flutter, has been off medication for two years without recurrence.
中文繁体
移動, (使)飄動,揮動,顫動, 拍(翅)…
More中文简体
移动, (使)飘动,挥动,颤动, 拍(翅)…
MoreEspañol
revolotear…
MorePortuguês
tremular, flutuar ao vento, esvoaçar…
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~がはためく, ~をはためかす…
MoreTürk dili
dalgalan(dır)mak, çırpmak, sağa sola aşağı yukarı salla(n)mak…
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voleter, battre, voltiger…
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voleiar, onejar…
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