i Register
In some senses, flitter is marked as archaic. Watch for register when choosing this word.
verb
To scatter in pieces.
To move about rapidly and nimbly.
To move quickly from one condition or location to another.
How she remembered the gray-feathered titmouse flittering about as she stared unbelievingly at the grave of her sister and clung to Reese, then five years old.
There were two bugs flittering on either side of her.
To flutter or quiver.
noun
A fluttering movement
A waxing moon riding high in the sky and a flitter of bats about the rooftops, dipping and swerving as they gathered up the gnats that danced there in ephemeral clouds.
A rag; a tatter; a small piece or fragment.
Without a flitter of a blanket o'er me
But to return to where we left her, I see her still, propped up in a kind of stupor against one of the walls in which this wretched edifice abounds, her long grey greasy hair framing in its cowl of scrofulous mats a face where pallor, languor, hunger, acne, recent dirt, immemorial chagrin and surplus hair seemed to dispute the mastery. Flitters of perforated starch entwine an ear.
Any of various hesperiid butterflies of the genus Hyarotis.
A small aircraft or spacecraft.
Then all three went out to the flitter. A tiny speedster, really; a torpedo bearing stubby wings and the ludicrous tail-surfaces, the multifarious driving-, braking-, side-, top-, and under-jets so characteristic of the tricky, cranky, but ultra-maneuverable breed.
Small flitters were powered and made ready, and everything that carried manual controls was inspected and cleared for action.
A small perceptible feeling
Hannah couldn't stop a flitter of panic at the thought.
He sensed Wheeler tensing, the slightest of tremors in the stillness of the ruined chapel, a flitter of irritation.
noun
Pronunciation spelling of fritter.