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  1. Taking the Flak is a comedy drama which aired on BBC Two in summer 2009. It is set in a fictional Central African country that is the middle of a civil war. A team of BBC journalists arrive from London, to the annoyance of the local BBC stringer Harry Chambers (Bruce Mackinnon), and send reports back to BBC News in London.

  2. This sentence demonstrates three common uses of flack: 'Flack' comes from the German word 'Fliegerabwehrkanonen.'. Pilots under fire must have needed a shorter word. When you hear of someone "catching flack," you're hearing a figurative extension of a term used for antiaircraft guns, or for the shells fired from them.

  3. 14 de may. de 2024 · If you get a lot of flak from someone, they criticize you severely. If you take the flak, you get the blame for something. [...]

  4. Meaning: If you take the flak, you are strongly criticised for something. ('Take flak' is also used.) Country: International English | Subject Area: War, weapons and conflict | Usage Type: Both or All Words Used. Contributor: Richard Flynn.

  5. If you get a lot of flak from someone, they criticize you severely. If you take the flak, you get the blame for something. [...]

  6. take the flak. To be blamed (for something). Henderson causes all sorts of problems with our projects, but I'm always the one who takes the flak! Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2024 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

  7. take flak. To receive a lot of criticism, judgment, or teasing (for something). Because I'm in a family full of surgeons, I take a lot of flak for my career in the arts. See also: flak, take. Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2024 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.