fleeting
English Edit
Etymology Edit
From Middle English fleten (“to float”), from Old English flēotan (“to float”), from Proto-Germanic *fleutaną, from Proto-Indo-European *plewd-.
Pronunciation Edit
Adjective Edit
fleeting (comparative more fleeting, superlative most fleeting)
- Passing quickly; of short duration.
- Synonyms: transient, ephemeral; see also Thesaurus:ephemeral
- 1931, Martha Kinross, “The Screen — From This Side”, in The Fortnightly, volume 130, page 511:
- Architecture, sculpture, painting are static arts. Even in literature "our flying minds," as George Meredith says, cannot contain protracted description. It is so; for from sequences of words they must assemble all the details in one simultaneous impression. But moments of fleeting beauty too transient to be caught by any means less swift than light itself are registered on the screen.
- 2003, Gabrielle Walker, Snowball Earth: The Story of a Maverick Scientist and His Theory of the Global Catastrophe That Spawned Life As We Know It, Three Rivers Press, →ISBN, pages 34–35:
- During the fleeting summer months of his field season, when the outer vestiges of winter melted briefly, there were ponds and pools and lakes of water everywhere.
- 2008, Barbara L. Bellman, Susan Goldstein, Flirting After Fifty: Lessons for Grown-Up Women on How to Find Love Again, iUniverse, published 2008, →ISBN, page 12:
- For starters, we see examples all the time of some middle-aged men trying to hang onto their own fleeting youth by sporting younger women on their arms.
Collocations Edit
Often used with nouns indicating mental, perceptual, or emotional states
Translations Edit
passing quickly
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Verb Edit
fleeting
- present participle and gerund of fleet