flutter

[fluht-er] /ˈflʌt ər/
verb (used without object)
1.
to wave, flap, or toss about:
Banners fluttered in the breeze.
2.
to flap the wings rapidly; fly with flapping movements.
3.
to move in quick, irregular motions; vibrate.
4.
to beat rapidly, as the heart.
5.
to be tremulous or agitated.
6.
to go with irregular motions or aimless course:
to flutter back and forth.
verb (used with object)
7.
to cause to flutter; vibrate; agitate.
8.
to throw into nervous or tremulous excitement; cause mental agitation; confuse.
noun
9.
a fluttering movement:
He made little nervous flutters with his hands.
10.
a state of nervous excitement or mental agitation:
a flutter of anticipation.
12.
Audio. a variation in pitch resulting from rapid fluctuations in the speed of a recording.
Compare wow2 (def 1).
13.
Chiefly British. a small wager or speculative investment.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English floteren, Old English floterian, frequentative of flotian to float
Related forms
flutterer, noun
flutteringly, adverb
unfluttered, adjective
unfluttering, adjective
Synonyms
2. See fly1 . 10. flurry, twitter, stir, dither.
Examples from the web for flutter
  • Adult males flutter above the water, their wings a whir.
  • When a pitcher throws a knuckleball, the ball has no rotation and appears to flutter.
  • The lacy curtains from the secondhand shop flutter over the bedroom window.
  • The city's divisions flutter even from its car-radio aerials.
  • Birds of all feathers flutter throughout the works of the bard.
  • He theatrically turned his head to watch a butterfly flutter by.
  • Space is full of images that make a geek's heart flutter.
  • The result is timing variations that cause artifacts known as wow and flutter.
  • Cactus wrens call and mourning doves flutter in and out of the skirts.
  • Witness the text messages of freedom literally flutter free from insurgent cell phones.
British Dictionary definitions for flutter

flutter

/ˈflʌtə/
verb
1.
to wave or cause to wave rapidly; flap
2.
(intransitive) (of birds, butterflies, etc) to flap the wings
3.
(intransitive) to move, esp downwards, with an irregular motion
4.
(intransitive) (pathol) (of the auricles of the heart) to beat abnormally rapidly, esp in a regular rhythm
5.
to be or make nervous or restless
6.
(intransitive) to move about restlessly
7.
(swimming) to cause (the legs) to move up and down in a flutter kick or (of the legs) to move in this way
8.
(transitive) (Brit, informal) to wager or gamble (a small amount of money)
noun
9.
a quick flapping or vibrating motion
10.
a state of nervous excitement or confusion
11.
excited interest; sensation; stir
12.
(Brit, informal) a modest bet or wager
13.
(pathol) an abnormally rapid beating of the auricles of the heart (200 to 400 beats per minute), esp in a regular rhythm, sometimes resulting in heart block
14.
(electronics) a slow variation in pitch in a sound-reproducing system, similar to wow but occurring at higher frequencies
15.
a potentially dangerous oscillation of an aircraft, or part of an aircraft, caused by the interaction of aerodynamic forces, structural elastic reactions, and inertia
16.
(swimming) See flutter kick
17.
(music) Also called flutter tonguing. a method of sounding a wind instrument, esp the flute, with a rolling movement of the tongue
Derived Forms
flutterer, noun
flutteringly, adverb
Word Origin
Old English floterian to float to and fro; related to German flattern; see float
Word Origin and History for flutter
v.

Old English floterian "to flutter, fly, flicker, float to and fro, be tossed by waves," frequentative of flotian "to float" (see float (v.)). Related: Fluttered; fluttering. As a noun from 1640s; meaning "state of excitement" is 1740s.

flutter in Medicine

flutter flut·ter (flŭt'ər)
n.
Abnormally rapid pulsation, especially of the atria or ventricles of the heart.

Encyclopedia Article for flutter

in sound reproduction, waver in a reproduced tone or group of tones that is caused by irregularities in turntable or tape drive speed during recording, duplication, or reproduction. Low-frequency irregularities (as one per revolution of a turntable, referred to as "once arounds") cause wow and are recognized aurally as fluctuations in pitch. Irregularities that occur at higher frequencies are called flutter and cause a roughening of the tone: a piano sounds like a harp, and voices waver with small, rapid variations above and below proper pitch. Included among the causes of flutter and wow in disks are high spots in drive rollers and an off-centre hole in the disk. In tape and film reproducers, characteristic causes include nonuniform tension in take-up and payoff reels and mechanical distortion of the tape. Low-frequency background noise, either recorded on disk or tape from the recording mechanism or added to the reproduced tone from the reproducing mechanism, is known as rumble and is usually the result of vibration of the drive mechanism

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