Sc. [? var. of FLAG v., FLECK v.2] intr. To flee, run off; to fly away. Also with off.

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1789.  D. Davidson, Seasons, 25.

        [The lambs] round a tammock wheel, an’, fleggin, toss
The moudy-hillan to the air in stoor.
    Ibid., 76.
But, Nelly fled frae ’tween his arms,
  An’ aff wi’ Gib the Mason
                Flegg’d fast, that day.

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1893.  Stevenson, Catriona, 170. The solan … flegged aff about the roundness of the craig.

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