0 a sudden light fall of snow, blown in different directions by the wind -- 小陣雪
1 a sudden, short period of activity, excitement, or interest -- 一陣忙亂(或激動、關注)
They were met with strong resolution and a refusal to be flurried.
He must be of a calm and equitable temperament, not easily flurried, and possessing a super-abundance of patience.
Although he admitted that such flurries had happened before, he suggested that they were happening now at absolutely unprecedented level.
They were muddled and flurried, and they did not know anything about it.
We say day rate, because this is a kind of work which should not be done by men who are flurried or flying about in a hurry.
The danger is always that, in examining models around the world, everyone will get caught up in the flurries of excitement about a model somewhere that is thought to work.
At the end of this month the cost of supporting the £ against last week's flurries within this narrow band will have to be borne on the reserves.
I never knew him to be flurried.