English edit

Adjective edit

flottant (not comparable)

  1. (heraldry) Alternative form of flotant
    • 1856, David MacGregor Peter, The baronage of Angus and Mearns, page 96:
      [] gules; second, Azure, a sinister hand a paumee, couped, in pale, argent; third, Or, a galley, sails furled, oars in action, sable, flags flottant, gules; fourth, Argent, out of a mount in base, an oak-tree, vert []
    • 1881, Scottish Arms, Being a Collection of Armorial Bearings A. D. 1370-1678, page 264:
      [] with tassels flottant upwards or; []
    • 1903, Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, page 417:
      [] each surrounded by a banner flottant from the sides, the dexter flag charged with a cross, the sinister with a saltire, gules. The badge of the Order of St. Patrick is prescribed by the statutes of the Order, 28th February, 1783, wherein the saltire gules []

French edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Adjective edit

flottant (feminine flottante, masculine plural flottants, feminine plural flottantes)

  1. floating
  2. (figuratively) vacillating, fluctuating, indecisive, variable

Derived terms edit

Participle edit

flottant

  1. present participle of flotter

Further reading edit