Fletch - significado y definición. Qué es Fletch
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Qué (quién) es Fletch - definición

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Fletch (disambiguation)

Fletch         
·vt To feather, as an Arrow.
fletch         
[fl?t?]
¦ verb provide (an arrow) with feathers.
Origin
C17: alt. of fledge, prob. influenced by fletcher.
Fletch (novel)         
NOVEL BY GREGORY MCDONALD
Irwin Fletcher
Fletch is a 1974 mystery novel by Gregory Mcdonald, the first in a series featuring the character Irwin Maurice Fletcher.

Wikipedia

Fletch

Fletch may refer to:

  • Fletch (archery), the individual materials, such as feathers, that provide aerodynamic stabilization in arrows or darts
  • Adrian "Fletch" Fletcher, a fictional character in British medical dramas Casualty and Holby City
  • Andy Fletcher (musician), nicknamed "Fletch", a member of the band Depeche Mode
  • Fletch (novel), the first book in a series of books by Gregory Mcdonald featuring the character Irwin Maurice Fletcher
    • Fletch (film), a 1985 comedy starring Chevy Chase, based on the novel
  • Fletch (Hollyoaks), a fictional character from British soap opera Hollyoaks
  • Norman Stanley Fletcher, nicknamed "Fletch", the lead character in the British sit-com Porridge
  • Fletch & Vaughan, the weekday drive show of New Zealand's The Edge radio station with co-host Carl "Fletch" Fletcher
  • A nickname given to a person whose surname is Fletcher
Ejemplos de uso de Fletch
1. On my last visit to Fletch, I imagined Genial Harry Grout running a flourishing heroin and pornography franchise.
2. It means that Fletch, played by Ronnie Barker in the classic television comedy Porridge, would certainly have been in trouble.
3. Until then, it didn‘t look like he would go much further than his father, Fletch, a used–car salesman with an eighth–grade education.
4. So prisoners such as Fletch will have to find another way of brightening their day, or stick to "knock–knock" gags.
5. In a 1'74 episode, while fantasising in his prison cell about having a night out, Fletch mused: "I could call up a couple of birds – those darlings who dance on Top of the Pops, what are they called?