fugacious
fugacious — 形容詞
- fugaciouspositive
- more fugaciouscomparative
- most fugacioussuperlative
1. passing or ending very quickly, often in a way that seems natural or inevitable,
短暫的
很快消失或不持久的
passing or ending very quickly, often in a way that seems natural or inevitable, like a flower that blooms for just a day or the very short life of an insect.
The fugacious beauty of cherry blossoms draws crowds every spring.
櫻花短暫的美麗每年春天都吸引大量遊客。
collocation: fugacious beauty
In the desert, a short rain creates a fugacious landscape of tiny flowers.
在沙漠中,一場短暫的降雨創造出由微小花朵組成的短暫景色。
Lien captured the fugacious moment of sunset on her phone.
Lien 用手機捕捉了日落那短暫的一刻。
Fame built on viral videos is often fugacious and quickly forgotten.
靠病毒影片累積的名聲往往是短暫的,很快就被遺忘。
A fugacious scent of jasmine filled the garden for one warm night.
茉莉花短暫的香氣在花園裡縈繞了一個溫暖的夜晚。
- fleeting
most common word for this idea; neutral register, suitable for everyday use
- transitory
slightly more formal, often of phases or conditions that change (e.g. transitory phase)
- ephemeral
literary tone, often used for natural phenomena (e.g. ephemeral flowers, insects)
- evanescent
very formal, emphasises gradual vanishing rather than quick disappearance
文法句型
fugacious + noun
be + fugacious
用法筆記
Common in literary or formal writing rather than everyday speech. Often modifies abstract nouns such as beauty, moment, fame, scent, bloom, or pleasure. Not used to describe concrete objects that wear down or break — instead, it focuses on a natural short lifespan.