flurry /ˈflɚri/ nounplural flurriesLearner's definition of FLURRY[count]1 : a brief and light snowfall We had a few flurries yesterday. a snow flurry2 a : a brief period of excitement or activity ? + of There was a flurry of trading in the stock exchange. The incident could create a flurry of interest in safety issues.b : a large amount of something that happens or comes suddenly ? + of a flurry [=barrage] of publicity There was a flurry of requests for more information.
This is pure comedy. So how about identifying where the flurry ended up . This has to be the worse "crew" of assassins ever assembled 5-6-7-8 shots , a flurry, shots shells whatever . All these shots and only ONE hits the target. Would make one think that a marginal shooter with a bad rifle was taking the shots.
Should 2 shots spaced seconds apart be considered "a large amount of something that happens or comes suddenly"?
Agreed. It seems we are now redefining the English language. See above, so a snow flurry means all of the snow comes down "all together", I'm not buying it.
The latter I would say. Or even 3 shots.
Read it again. Kellerman heard a noise, heard the president say "My God, I am hit", turned around to see the president's hands near his neck, and then "a flurry of shells come into the car".
Only if that bad rifle was capable of shooting a flurry of shells all together.