the dwarves were the flee.
In J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Hobbit," the dwarves are imprisoned by the Elf King in Mirkwood for approximately three days. During this time, they are kept in cells and face the threat of being forgotten. Their escape is facilitated by the cleverness of Bilbo Baggins, who uses the invisibility of the One Ring to help them flee.
There was a most specially greedy, strong and wicked worm called Smaug. He heard of the dwarven riches in the Lonely Mountain and came and killed many of the dwarves and took over their home in the mountain.
You can't flee from them.
If you're playing Platinum, then yes, Zapdos will flee, but in other Pokemon games, no. Zapdos is generally a stationary legendary Pokemon, so it won't flee after you attack and you can stay in battle as long as necessary.
It increases speed, so use it when you need to attack first or flee from a Pokemon that's faster or won't let you flee.
Flee
yes because they know its coming
Wolves react to danger by assessing the threat level and determining the best course of action. They may defend their territory and pack members if necessary, or they may choose to flee if the danger is too great. Wolves have developed strong survival instincts and work together as a pack to increase their chances of escaping or repelling threats.
No, "flee" is not in the future tense. The future tense of "flee" would be "will flee" or "shall flee."
There was a most specially greedy, strong and wicked worm called Smaug. He heard of the dwarven riches in the Lonely Mountain and came and killed many of the dwarves and took over their home in the mountain.
The corresponding noun to the verb flee is flight.
The defendant was then seen to flee the scene. Flee from the danger!
It's just a normal verb. "I flee" "you flee" "he/she/it flees" etc.
The homophone of "flea" is "flee."
Flee was created in 1979-06.
They will flee from the ugly witch.
flee is present tense. fled is past. fleeing could also be present