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flea bite English

Meaning flea bite meaning

What does flea bite mean?

flea bite

a very minor inconvenience sting inflicted by a flea

Examples flea bite examples

How do I use flea bite in a sentence?

News and current affairs

Unfortunately, thus far, there is no sign that the crisis countries, above all France, are ready to bite the bullet.
Still, Hong's formula is simple, and it starts to bite when earnings get really big.
The many financial and oil-related sanctions that have been implemented in recent months and years are starting to bite.
An autopsy showed that he had a bite mark.
The rhetoric and posturing, the lack of commitment to human rights or democratic processes, may be - and should be - upsetting, but there will be far more bark than bite.
These nets cover people while they sleep, and repel or kill the mosquitoes, which tend to bite during the night.
With a little research, she would have discovered that male mosquitoes do not bite, and that the released mosquitoes (all male) die in the absence of their specially supplemented diet.
It is important to remember: those who were responsible for taking the British Marines captive wanted an escalation of the confrontation, both to improve their domestic standing, and to punch back for sanctions that were beginning to bite.
That is not an analysis; it is a sound bite.
Once these sanctions begin to bite, no one can say who will be hurt - or how badly.
This unique arrangement soon will be tested as the reforms begin to bite, and the outcome could have important and lasting consequences for efforts to implement structural reforms elsewhere around the world.
Along with its empty threats of interest rate hikes, there is a real danger the ECB will be labeled the central bank that barks but doesn't bite (animal behaviorists know that barking and biting are substitutes, not complements).
Similarly, in the United Kingdom, the BBC retains its credibility because it can bite the government hand that feeds it.
They are managed by equally professional press handlers, masters of spin and the television sound bite.
Using climate policy to discipline these industries would help rebalance the economy while taking a bite out of China's emissions.
Consumers are hurting worldwide, especially the poor, for whom food takes a major bite out of household budgets.
Loss of credibility, if it comes, can bite hard and fast.
Indeed, I consider the EFSF to be a stopgap measure while we remedy the fundamental shortcomings of the Stability and Growth Pact, whose fiscal rules lack both substantive and formal bite.
Indeed, local governments appear less afraid of Beijing's bite than before.
After Iran or Saudi Arabia, Malaysia's Sharia court system is probably the most extensive in the Muslim world, and the accompanying bureaucracy is not only big but has more bite than the national parliament.
Today, as low oil prices and Western sanctions bite, he is making them poor and nearly universally despised.
The bite in his comment is justified.
The message conveyed by the pope and by the religious leaders with whom he met defied the contemporary assumption that the public cannot understand anything longer or more complicated than a sound bite.
First, the sanctions imposed so far - visa cancellations, asset seizures or freezes, and the like - will not give Sevastopol back to Ukraine, but they will eventually bite, at least in certain Russian business sectors.
There is, of course, another explanation of why Putin's popularity is still growing in the face of a worsening economy: those unable to fend for themselves naturally look to the state for help - and are hardly likely to bite the hand feeds them.

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