How To Use Fluttering In A Sentence

  • On a tree that is virtually bare, one can often see a solitary leaf still fluttering on a top twig. Times, Sunday Times
  • These live conversations took place via a messagerie service that the computer pirates called Gretel, identified by a logo of a heart with fluttering eyelashes. Diffusion of Innovations
  • But there is only one sure-fire way to send pulses racing and hearts fluttering, and that's alcohol.
  • Fluttering and screaming, the bird made every effort to escape, but not before Dee was aware of a label tied round his neck. Traditions of Lancashire, Volume 2 (of 2)
  • Overseas aidJohn Arne Riise, or "mummy's boy", finally joined this summer having been utterly unwooed by the club's fluttering eyelashes before he signed for Liverpool in 2001, supposedly on the advice of his representative – his mother. Fulham Premier League 2011-12 team guide
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  • There is a bird fluttering about inside the chimney, how can we get it out?
  • The murmuring, fluttering sounds of the crowd echoed off the high ceilings and stone arches of the chapel.
  • While she was fluttering around her office, giving me my schedule and a school map, she shouted out little bits of advice and suggestions for classes.
  • The nurses were already fluttering around her, busy preparing for the arrival of the future heir.
  • The moths themselves are also fluttering about in the daytime in long grass. Times, Sunday Times
  • Judd made no attempt to tidy up the sheer chaos of this music, presenting its many dynamic extremes without apology, never subduing its often seemingly random accompanying noises of bells, woodwind flutterings and bassoon growls.
  • Then they spot a tiny white flag fluttering from the window and relax. Times, Sunday Times
  • The window was open and the check curtains were fluttering in the light breeze coming in off the water.
  • After the hot summer days the mist sometimes hung over the moorland as if a whole lake were behind the old trees, among which the crows and the daws were fluttering.
  • They jut from girls 'lids like an underbite, fanning the air in great whips of painted wind, and they form the fluttering basis of a trend spreading faster than conjunctivitis. Up front: Eva Wiseman
  • Fluttering her eyelashes, ‘I don't know where I got it, but isn't it a beaut?‘
  • All do precisely what's expected of them yet fail to really set the pulse fluttering.
  • So saying, he went up to the Princess and laying his hand upon her bosom, found her heart fluttering like a doveling and the life yet hanging to her breast. [ Arabian nights. English
  • Giant larkspurs thrust up their flower-rods, between the dentated foliage of which gaped the mouths of tawny snapdragons, while the schizanthus reared its scanty leaves and fluttering blooms, that looked like butterflies 'wings of sulphur hue splashed with soft lake. La faute de l'Abbe Mouret
  • As the match began the blustery wind freshened and cooled with the huge Hawks flag fluttering above the old pavilion.
  • He caught hold of her frantically fluttering hands and forced her to stay still and look at him.
  • … So: dusk in the frozen lake of a city park, skating behind the puffy red earmuffs and the fluttering yellow ringlets of a strange shikse teaches me the meaning of the word longing… Forgive me luxuriating, but these are probably the most poignant hours of my life I'm talking about. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • Forceful yet charming; a voice that sent memories fluttering through me like a swarm of batwings from the cave in my stomach. Ramona: That's What I Want!
  • Red kites were hunting on the heights, their outstretched wings fluttering long feathery fingers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beyond it was what Jamie referred to as "the doocot"; or so I assumed, from the assorted pigeons that were fluttering in and out of the pierced-work opening at the top of the building. Sick Cycle Carousel
  • Pressed up against her, Aelex could feel the fluttering heartbeat.
  • After fluttering thus from branch to branch, like the poor birdling that cannot take its flight, discouraged by his wretched attempts at life, he plunged straight before him, hoping for nothing but a turn of luck, driving over the roads and fields, lending a hand to the farmers, sleeping in stables and garrets, or oftener in the open air; sometimes charitably sheltered in a kind man's barn, and perhaps -- oh bliss! Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 12, No. 29, August, 1873
  • A discreet virtuoso, Yates adapts skipping folk-fiddle melodies to trumpet, flugelhorn and tenor horn, and his engaging themes – full of light, fluttering figures – are compatibly supported by Bende's bell-like chording and Byrne's galloping low-register sounds on the bodhran drum and Latin-American cajon. Neil Yates: Five Countries – review
  • Slowly, other sounds emerge to fill the space around his voice: a slow and rhythmic drumming, the trilling of a wooden flute, melancholy chords of the stringed saz and the fluttering of an oboe-like instrument called a mey.
  • There is a bird fluttering about inside the chimney. How can we get it out?
  • Their motion through the bushes often disturbed clouds of yellow butterflies, which had been hanging on the fringes of the tall purple asters, and which rose toying with each other, and fluttering in ethereal dances against the blue sky, looking like whirls and eddies of air-flowers. Oldtown Folks
  • Beyond Mr Jefferson's high black hat, through those tangled dew-drops of flame, Mr Goosevort saw golden hair glide softly through the oasis of bodies gathered vaguely round the stage, Mr Umberto and Mrs. Jefferson laughed again together, and Mr Howle's mournful ululation could be heard adrift a lake of rabble... golden hair turning away and fluttering into the shadow of a winding stairway. Mr Goosevort
  • Gingerly, Jack took his stepfather's wrist and felt the light fluttering of his pulse.
  • I well remember the first occasion on which I saw a spotted forktail; I was walking down a Himalayan path, alongside of which a brook was flowing, when suddenly from a rock in mid-stream there arose a black-and-white apparition, that flitted away, displaying a long tail fluttering behind it. Birds of the Indian Hills
  • She couldn't quite seem to place the changes that appeared to have occurred on the streets as she walked them on her own with her heavy boots and fluttering duster coat accompanying her.
  • The sun has been drifting in and out, baby clothes have been fluttering cutely on the washing line, all the garden toys have been brought out of their winter storage.
  • Fashimir Ander came whirling up the spiral trackway, his gown fluttering, his sleeves like kites. A PLAGUE OF ANGELS
  • King Ryan sat down slowly, his robes fluttering about him.
  • From an ash-grey sky finely-wrought snowflakes descended, fluttering angularly in the calm air like the scraps of paper that Americans pour over their heroes – God was blessing the Revolution – and fighter planes flew overhead in formation, while others flew low over the highest towers of Russian history. Archive 2009-09-01
  • It was a summer afternoon. The clear blue sky was dotted with fluttering larks.
  • On many silver birch trees, especially young ones, there are still pale yellow leaves fluttering in the wind on the lower branches. Times, Sunday Times
  • She finally saw him, leaning against the railing, hair fluttering in the light breeze.
  • Timmy then promptly began imitating a blonde model, screaming and fluttering his eyelashes.
  • He put the robe over his plaid shirt and jeans, wrapped the turban up, and pulled the fluttering silk scarf over his brown beard.
  • At the foot of the Heights, the broad basin of the St. Lawrence was a-drift in the dusk with fluttering pennons. Out To Win The Story of America in France
  • Gingerly, Jack took his stepfather's wrist and felt the light fluttering of his pulse.
  • Let us see all those flags fluttering again.
  • The coloured flags are fluttering in the breeze.
  • He could see, from the corner of his eye, the pulses fluttering in their throats.
  • However, my frantic eye-fluttering demonstrations merely provoked inquiries after my contact lenses rather than the swoons of desire I had anticipated.
  • In the air the sideband voices of amateur radio operators is a fluttering electronic chorus. The Tourists
  • There is some fluttering about when our interview should happen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other flyers were still fluttering from lampposts and stuck on empty buildings, some with candles guttering out beneath them.
  • With her serene smiles, delicate shimmies, and fluttering fan, she cast a teasing spell of seduction.
  • At the foot of the Heights, the broad basin of the St. Lawrence was a-drift in the dusk with fluttering pennons. Out To Win The Story of America in France
  • There is a bird fluttering about inside the chimney. How can we get it out?
  • And the fluttering, chirping gentlemen are rubbing their hands in amaze and wondering why they did not do it long ago, it was so very, very simple. These Bones shall Rise Again - Essay by Jack London
  • My heart was now fluttering, my pulse quickening.
  • His hand glided above the long arm-bones of the larger skeleton, a dark shadow fluttering like a large moth as it crossed the jackstraw pile of ribs. Dragonfly in Amber
  • Jim fumbled cash onto the counter, coins clinking and bouncing, bills fluttering. A Corpse is a Corpse
  • He heard the fluttering of bullets before the fast slap-slap-slap of an automatic rifle.
  • Above, the sky would be of a cold blue colour, save for a fringe of flame-coloured streaks on the horizon that kept turning ever paler and paler; and when the moon had come out there would be wafted through the limpid air the sounds of a frightened bird fluttering, of a bulrush rubbing against its fellows in the gentle breeze, and of a fish rising with a splash. Poor Folk
  • She came to him, heart fluttering beneath the thin gauze that stretched across her ample breasts.
  • Peering out past her hood into the dark gloom, she thought she made out a white shape fluttering in the wind of the storm.
  • The ostrich walked up and down the aisle during the ceremony fluttering its wide-open wings all the while as if it were blessing the couple.
  • His stance was relaxed, almost lazy and languid, and I felt butterflies fluttering around my stomach when he caught my gaze and held it.
  • It was a summer afternoon. The clear blue sky was dotted with fluttering larks.
  • For them there was nothing left — no more tremblings and flutterings and delicious anguishes, no more throbbing and pulsing, and sighing and song. WHEN GOD LAUGHS
  • The orchestration, rich with harmonium, celeste and harp, and aglow with fluttering woodwind and solo string writing, displays Massenet's hunger for throwing every musical meat, fish and fowl into his recipe, with uneven results. Cendrillon; Rinaldo – review
  • To emphasise her point, she picked up her rifle, sighted and fired in one motion, neatly clipping off the end of a branch high overhead, sending it and its leaves fluttering down about them.
  • The Gucci windows with their huge globe with the ‘fluttering snow’ are seasonable and trendy.
  • In the best traditions of chaos theory the storm which engulfed the coalition's forestry sell-off began last summer with little more than the fluttering of a butterfly's wings when new ministers warned the Forestry Commission that modest in-year savings would have to be made in its current budget. Forestry sell-off: public and political opposition forced U-turn
  • In many a laboured scene of the wannest humour and of the most affecting passion I have seen the best actors disconcerted, while these buzzing muscatos have been fluttering round their eyes and ears. The Palmy Days of Nance Oldfield
  • The designer even managed to transfer a brocade lattice motif over the curvaceous sheepskin jacket coupled with fluttering silk skirt, and dyed all his furs in flashy tones of blue, pink and purple.
  • Over the gallery grow the roses; out near at hand a bignonia-vine lifts its yellow flare aloft and throws down a fluttering shower of bell-like blooms, and all the air is heavy with the scents of the South. Southern Stories Retold from St. Nicholas
  • May 13, 2010 at 1:56 pm issa big strange….have just had teh flutterings an bubblings till nao. cant beleeve it! *pinkeye* iz contayjus! - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • She looks straight out of the canvas, utterly and completely bereft of the merest fluttering thought. Times, Sunday Times
  • Looking out on the front lawn, I saw some birds fluttering around some food scraps.
  • Close in the rear of the resistless herd then charged the lancers of Paez, with the terrible black bannerol fluttering in the van. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 03, No. 16, February, 1859
  • With butterflies fluttering in their stomachs, pupils flocked to their schools to find out if all their hard work had paid off.
  • Azures have a slow, fluttering flight and are often one of the first butterflies encountered when the first warm weather of spring arrives.
  • While waiting for the wings to stop fluttering so a suitable portrait could be taken of this female Eastern Swallowtail in dark form, or it could be a Black Swallowtail since that is the caterpillar we have seen around lately, it was noticed that the hind wing was stationary in spite of the moving forewing. Plant It And They Will Come « Fairegarden
  • Disappearing into the grey mist through a small door with iron staples, she soon reissued thence with a hencoop, and, seating herself on the steps of the doorway, and setting the coop on her knees, took between her two large palms some fluttering, chirping, downy, golden chicks, and raised them to her ruddy lips and cheeks with a murmur of: Through Russia
  • There are the flags fluttering defiantly from cars. Times, Sunday Times
  • I'm not yet a good driver, nor a completely confident one but at least the idea of doing it no longer sets butterflies fluttering in my stomach.
  • Its blare sent birds fluttering from the branches of the live oak that overhung the gate, making the Spanish moss sway as if it were alive.
  • Hubble's view of Saturn with a double view of its fluttering aurorae. Hubble Captures Double Aurorae Light Show on Saturn | Universe Today
  • A moth was fluttering round the lamp.
  • As she was returning, her eye fell on the folds of an object fluttering among the tedded grass. Girlhood and Womanhood The Story of some Fortunes and Misfortunes
  • Visit www.feelunique.com for more information on how to take part, become a winker and make money from fluttering your eyelids. Archive 2008-12-01
  • Never divining Joan's fluttering wildness, her blind hatred of restraint and compulsion, her abhorrence of mastery by another, and mistaking the warmth and enthusiasm in her eyes (aroused by his latest tale) for something tender and acquiescent, he drew her to him, laid a forcible detaining arm about her waist, and misapprehended her frantic revolt for an exhibition of maidenly reluctance. Chapter 26
  • A ‘moth-type’ display when the cock makes short fluttering flights above the hen has been described.
  • Indians (Bedouins) with very long spears in their hands, cavorting around on old crowbait horses, and spearing imaginary enemies; whooping, and fluttering their rags in the wind, and carrying on in every respect like The Innocents Abroad
  • ‘The personal shoppers were fluttering around outside, petrified there would be some big debacle, but when she came out she was in hoots of laughter,’ says Gray.
  • Just pretend you were doing DIY or something He felt his stomach fluttering, but forced himself to grow bold again. BEHINDLINGS
  • On a tree that is virtually bare, one can often see a solitary leaf still fluttering on a top twig. Times, Sunday Times
  • I fear I should tire of the mute, monotonous innocence of the lamb; I should erelong feel as burdensome the nestling dove which never stirred in my bosom: but my patience would exult in stilling the flutterings and training the energies of the restless merlin. Shirley, by Charlotte Bronte
  • The moths themselves are also fluttering about in the daytime in long grass. Times, Sunday Times
  • The movement inside her filled her completely, an endless fluttering of wings, intense and urgent pecking of beaks.
  • But Claire reported an occasion with Lazaro after I left Zambia when their attention was drawn by a greater honeyguide fluttering and croaking ahead of them. A Year on the Wing
  • The vista's broad sweep was not of much interest to the boys; they were more concerned with details close at hand - a shiny rock, a fluttering bird, a lizard, or a chance to stir up an anthill with a stick.
  • A black and yellow Monarch glided over the trellis, fluttering its wings as it perched on the clematis leaf. Chicken Soup for the Soul: Grieving and Recovery
  • He had noted the swift intaking of the white cleading on the hedges, the disappearance of fluttering garmentry from the clothes-lines. Patsy
  • A chorus of fairies wafts above the stage, fluttering their diaphanous wings.
  • the sudden fluttering of the startled pigeons
  • Kat raised her head momentarily and blew a pesky strand of hair out of her eyes, fluttering her lips so that a raspberry gently sounded.
  • This was similar to the flame of a big blue slow moving torch, that had a steady slight wind blowing on it, that made the leading edge wobble and warp in a slow fluttering motion, with the changing gun-blue phosphorescence.
  • All the hidden excitement that had been fluttering within her died like the flame of a candle with the sigh of a cold wind.
  • There are also putti riding dolphins and angels with fluttering tunics pressing against their epicene bodies.
  • The door shut softly, brown paint flaking off behind me, fluttering down to the carpet.
  • The only sounds we could hear were the blustering wind, and fluttering paper pressing against ruined hedges and walls.
  • Then they spot a tiny white flag fluttering from the window and relax. Times, Sunday Times
  • Splashed with red clay until he looked like a terra-cotta image restored to light after concealment under rubbish, steaming with sweat, fluttering with importance, Frank Edward stood still for a moment beside Alec, shovelling away some mullock. Last Leaves from Dunk Island
  • It settled my nervous fluttering heart beat, which settled to a slightly quicker-then-normal, but less uncomfortable pace.
  • April 29, 2008 at 12:30 pm omg dapanferkitteh, u haz recalled a long-losted memory- teh wide-eyed tabby on teh dresserwanting gushifud breakfast crash..down goes teh keys..tabby looks at bed…swoosh..papers flutteringdown.. Oh hai… - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
  • Brightly coloured flags were fluttering in the breeze.
  • No longer were prospective mates fluttering round him at every turn.
  • I'm thinking a phoebe, purple martin, starling fluttering up, a kingbird, I have no idea what's on the lowest wire, a nuthatch and a robin.
  • A fluttering of buona seras filled the air around us, as if, in crossing the threshold that separated the stone landing from the wooden porch, we had startled a small covey of happy birds and they were brushing our ears with their soft, warm wings. The Italian Summer
  • She was never very comfortable when he was about — lively and twisting, but with something settled and ancestral in him; a little like Ting-a-ling — something judgmatic, ever telling her that she was fluttering and new. The White Monkey
  • The leaves were slowly fluttering to the ground.
  • There are the flags fluttering defiantly from cars. Times, Sunday Times
  • She vamps and coos and then is swept into a back room to change into the next fab outfit, assistants fluttering on every side of her.
  • On the steps I stood still and looked round: long storm-clouds were creeping heavily over the grey sky; a dark-brown bush was writhing in the wind, and murmuring plaintively; the yellow grass helplessly and forlornly bowed down to the earth; flocks of thrushes were fluttering in the mountain-ashes among the bright, flame-coloured clusters of berries. The Jew and other stories
  • It was a very hard seat which Mr. Jeffreys had vacated, and her ladyship, after sitting there over two hours, nodding asleep a good part of the time, began to feel internal sinkings and flutterings which presaged what she called a "swound," and necessitated recourse to a crystal flask of strong waters which she had prudently brought in her muff. London Pride Or When the World Was Younger
  • Instead of picking a pair of pretty-pretty stars, Ms. Taichman has gone in a different direction: Georg is played by Mark Bedard, who is balding, bespectacled and sharp-faced, wh ile Lisa McCormick, who plays Amalia, is an eagerly fluttering sparrow who is charming but not glamorous. In Love With 'She Loves Me'
  • On many silver birch trees, especially young ones, there are still pale yellow leaves fluttering in the wind on the lower branches. Times, Sunday Times
  • On many silver birch trees, especially young ones, there are still pale yellow leaves fluttering in the wind on the lower branches. Times, Sunday Times
  • The girls all blushed deeply and giggled behind their fluttering fans.
  • There were long but thankfully hilarious speeches and seemingly hundreds of little kids fluttering, pushing and stampeding through adult legs in the semi-darkness.
  • The red flags on the city tower are fluttering in the wind.
  • The sight of lively girls clad in beautiful Korean clothes playing it gaily by fluttering the hem of their skirts in the breeze is really beautiful. Girls Go Postal! | Neolttwigi
  • It was a weak attempt to disguise the fluttering sensation in her stomach, the joyous pitter-patter of her heart, those oh-so confusing thoughts she found she didn't quite understand.
  • Flags were flapping/fluttering in the breeze.
  • His fluttering eyes look at me, small slits of sky-blue against the black of his lashes and dirty tan of his skin.
  • The real news, however, is that Imelda Marcos - sometimes accused in the plot to assassinate Ninoy, and as lavishly pompadoured and aggressively fluttering as ever - also won her race for Congress. Phil Bronstein: Ninoy, Noynoy, No-No.
  • Instead of picking a pair of pretty-pretty stars, Ms. Taichman has gone in a different direction: Georg is played by Mark Bedard, who is balding, bespectacled and sharp-faced, wh ile Lisa McCormick, who plays Amalia, is an eagerly fluttering sparrow who is charming but not glamorous. In Love With 'She Loves Me'
  • The birds were active, whirring and fluttering among the trees.
  • While a group of nurses wheeled the young woman into a hospital room, Dresers noticed that the woman's eyelids were fluttering.
  • I began to feel the beginnings of butterflies fluttering in my stomach.
  • People bathe in the water, colourful saris and white dhotis fluttering in the breeze.
  • There is some fluttering about when our interview should happen. Times, Sunday Times
  • There are also putti riding dolphins and angels with fluttering tunics pressing against their epicene bodies.
  • Her chiffon skirt was fluttering in the night breeze.
  • There is, by the bye, a little blue butterfly whom the people call bluewing; you can see it in the summer sitting on the tall blades of the grass, and its wings resemble a flax blossom; a fluttering flax blossom with antenna instead of filaments. In Midsummer Days, and Other Tales
  • Men tended to underrate him, women - even the most respectable - found themselves fluttering their eyelashes. DEATH SPEAKS SOFTLY
  • At certain times of the day, small birds flock to these branches, chattering and fluttering, as if this were a festive occasion.
  • Then they spot a tiny white flag fluttering from the window and relax. Times, Sunday Times
  • She was beginning to stir, her long lashes fluttering against her cheeks.
  • The man who dwells for long periods face to face with the bitter truths of life learns so to distrust a fleeting moment of joy, gives habitually so cold a reception to the tardy messenger of delight, that, when the bright guest outdares his churlishness and perforce tarries with him, there ensues a passionate revulsion unknown to hearts which open readily to every fluttering illusive bliss. The Unclassed
  • I'm been corrected before when I've called sprinkles confetti, so I'd like to involve actual confetti in a cupcake experience- maybe a waitress could be involved in the fluttering down as it's placed before the lucky girl? Cupcake blog roommate interview
  • The movement inside her filled her completely, an endless fluttering of wings, intense and urgent pecking of beaks.
  • I remember a rally in Anniston, the county seat, remember a band playing "Dixie", and an undulating canopy of Confederate battle flags, a whole auditorium of Stars and Bars and fluttering red.
  • She felt the butterflies fluttering in her stomach and she prayed they would never go away.
  • I could feel a fluttering pulse.
  • Also include the lyrical "Hunter, Come Home" by Richard McKenna (who went on to fame as the author of "The Sand Pebbles"), which describes fluttering, leaflike "phytos" and other weird creatures. 10 Possible Sources of "Avatar" in Classic Science Fiction
  • Males attract females and defend their territories with undulating flight displays, fluttering and gliding while calling.
  • I also suggested that it appeared to be blinking because she was looking at it through the fluttering leaves of an aspen tree.
  • The deserted boat was in the trough of the sea, rolling drunkenly across each comber, its loose spritsail out at right angles to it and fluttering and flapping in the wind. Chapter 25
  • History "; there was no chatter of girls from hall and stairway to distract the loftier inspirations that possessed him, no intermittent soprano noises emitted by fluttering feminine fashion, no calflike barytones from masculine adolescence to drive him to the woods, where it was always rather difficult for him to focus his attention on printed pages. The Danger Mark
  • But a shielded swooper, while impervious to the "dis" ray, was helpless against squadrons of Han aircraft, for the Hans developed a technique of playing their beams underneath the swooper in such fashion as to suck it down flutteringly into the vacuum so created, until they brought it finally, and more or less violently, to earth. The Airlords of Han
  • He noted that several of the surrounding buildings had pennants of the same design fluttering from flagstaffs.
  • The fluttering of rainbow flags also indicates a waning identification with the Italian nation and a loss of support for the Italian state.
  • The bird rises almost perpendicularly in the air with fluttering wingbeats before turning rapidly and making a slow spiral descent with wings and tail outspread.
  • They seem to be fluttering their wings and might fly away any moment.
  • He can see crows nesting on the underside of tree branches, and leaves fluttering down to the sky.
  • A bell with an old voice — which I dare say in its time had often said to the house, Here is the green farthingale, Here is the diamond – hilted sword, Here are the shoes with red heels and the blue solitaire — sounded gravely in the moonlight, and two cherry – colored maids came fluttering out to receive Estella. Great Expectations
  • This little dark chocolate-coloured moth may frequently be seen by day fluttering over the limestone rocks.
  • Marie shook her head; trying to ward off the butterflies fluttering nervously about in her stomach.
  • Her chiffon skirt was fluttering in the night breeze.
  • By the time that they reached Dover he had become so used to his wife's condition that he made but little fluttering as she walked out of the boat by that narrow gangway which is so contrived as to make an arrival there a serious inconvenience to a lady, and a nuisance even to a man. Can You Forgive Her?
  • She opened her rosebud mouth and said, with a voice like leaves fluttering against cobbles, ‘Would you like to buy a hat?’
  • Pulse fluttering like a wild thing in her veins, at her temples, Shannon resumes walking, her shoes still in her hands, road grit peppering the soles of her feet, her nylons. Etched in Bone
  • He fussed over the flags and banners fluttering from the dome. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • A drummer was screaming in pain, his hand fluttering on the drumskin to make a grotesque dying music. Sharpe's Devil
  • Most people have experienced these occasional, brief irregular heartbeats that feel like a skipped, fluttering or racing heartbeat.
  • Wraparound or flutteringly light dresses, bustiers with tiny shorts.
  • You know summer's just around the corner when you see your first butterfly fluttering around the garden or the park. Times, Sunday Times
  • He looked at me, with a trembling finger upon his hard-set lips, and the spade in his other hand quivered like a wind vane; but I became as firm as the monument beside me, and my heart, instead of fluttering, grew as steadfast as a glacier. Erema
  • So in the meantime I'll have to make do with this little billet-doux which has come fluttering through my letterbox…
  • His evening gowns with their cutaway silhouettes, tightfitting skirts or fluttering hemlines were decorated with feathers -- and then more feathers. Zac Posen, Hakaan Yildirim among designers outshone in the City of Light
  • The butterflies that were fluttering around the flowers quickly left the area and an eerie silence filled the clearing.
  • Pyatt set up the winning goal 2: 18 later, driving wide down the right side and slipping a backhand pass back to the top of the crease, where Sedin shoveled a fluttering puck up and over Nabokov's right shoulder. USATODAY.com - Hockey - San Jose vs. Vancouver
  • He shifted in his sleep, his eyes fluttering in the fever of a dream.
  • He could almost tell what it was to be a bird, a nightbug, a butterfly, twirling and swirling, dancing upon the high currents, dodging limbs and weaving through flowers, flittering and fluttering ever so high, unimaginably high.
  • It was an ancient Chinese philosopher who is first recorded as having said, what doubtlessly the cave men before him gibbered, namely, that a woman pursues a man by fluttering away in advance of him. CHAPTER XXXVII
  • Red kites were hunting on the heights, their outstretched wings fluttering long feathery fingers. Times, Sunday Times
  • -- Tony blushes her swarthy crimson: Diana, fluttering, rebukes her; but Diana is the appeasable Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith
  • Their eyes locked and Lily felt the butterflies fluttering in her stomach.
  • On returning to his hotel one evening, he spied a cluster of moths fluttering about the shrub's small, yellow flowers.
  • You know summer's just around the corner when you see your first butterfly fluttering around the garden or the park. Times, Sunday Times
  • Why he called her his flutterer no one ever knew, unless it was because her ribbons were incessantly fluttering; but, had he called her his shadow, the name would have been more appropriate. Madame Midas
  • As a last-ditch effort they initiate very unpredictable movements, fluttering their wings irregularly so that they tumble around in the sky, making them a difficult target to catch.
  • Then there was a little greenfinch, just fledged, fluttering along the ground, and it seemed quite possible to catch it, till it managed to flutter under the blackberry bush. Adam Bede
  • Fluttering inhabitants occupy birdcages at either side of the porch.
  • Indications that patients were in hypnosis included observation of eyelid fluttering, catalepsy, and slowed respiration.
  • He fussed over the flags and banners fluttering from the dome. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • A discreet virtuoso, Yates adapts skipping folk-fiddle melodies to trumpet, flugelhorn and tenor horn, and his engaging themes – full of light, fluttering figures – are compatibly supported by Bende's bell-like chording and Byrne's galloping low-register sounds on the bodhran drum and Latin-American cajon. Neil Yates: Five Countries – review
  • Then there was a little greenfinch, just fledged, fluttering along the ground, and it seemed quite possible to catch it, till it managed to flutter under the blackberry bush. Adam Bede
  • I follow his finger to the giant tricolour fluttering in the breeze.

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