0 to throw or move something suddenly and with a lot of force -- rzucać/zarzucać/zrzucać coś itp.
1 a sexual relationship that is short and not serious -- (przelotny) romans
She had a fling with someone last summer.
2 a short period of time when you have a lot of enjoyment or pleasure -- chwila wolności lub zabawy
This is my last fling before the exams.
They are being flung out of the profession which they chose for themselves and which they loved, a profession of which they were the ornament.
The charges flung from side to side are virtually identical.
It is only flung at large to be spent if anyone is good enough to spend it.
The patient suffered from the delusion that her food was poisoned, and when it was left with her flung it about the cell.
It is a bit like a poor-oot at a wedding—money which is flung out of the car when the bride leaves.
Chimpanzees often threaten by waving and flinging branches but, if such are not handy, they will toss rocks or even clumps of dirt in the same general direction.
At first blush such an approach seems inadequate, as without amplification it cannot account for the fact that irregulars usually occur in patterns, such as cling-clung, fling-flung, sling-slung.
To my surprise, the linguists in the group actually became visibly angry (in an unintended spontaneous display of multimodal communication, one fellow flung his pencil onto the floor).