Advertisement

Origin and history of Flushing

Flushing

New York village established 1645 by English Puritans (now a neighborhood in Queens), an English corruption of Dutch Vlissingen, name of Dutch town where the Puritans had taken refuge, literally "flowing" (so called for its location on an estuary of the West Scheldt), and thus perhaps distantly related to flush (v.1).

Entries linking to Flushing

mid-13c., flusshen "move rapidly or violently; rush, dart, spring" (intransitive); late 15c., flush up, transitive, "cause to fly; start or flush (birds)," perhaps imitative of the sound of beating wings.

The sense of "spurt, rush out suddenly, flow with force" (1540s, usually of water) probably is the same word, with the connecting notion being "sudden movement," but its senses seem more to fit the older ones of flash (v.),except in flash flood now all transferred to this word via its variant flushe. OED (1989) considers this probably not connected to Old French flux. Transitive sense "cause to flow" is from 1590s.

The meaning "cleanse (a drain, etc.) with a rush of water" is by 1789. Of the face, "become suffused with warm color," from 1680s (flushed). The sense of "inflame with pride or passion" as a result of success, victory, etc., is from 1630s; perhaps influenced in sense by flesh (v.). Related: Flushing.

    Advertisement

    More to explore

    Share Flushing

    Advertisement
    Trending
    Advertisement