Word of the Day

: May 31, 2022

ephemeral

play
adjective ih-FEM-uh-rul

What It Means

Ephemeral means "lasting a very short time."

// The performance was not recorded, a fact that made its ephemeral nature all the more poignant.

See the entry >

ephemeral in Context

"The varieties available at the plant sale include spring ephemeral wildflowers, which bloom a short period of time in the spring…." — Cris Belle, WJW Fox 8 News (Cleveland, Ohio), 2 May 2022


Did You Know?

In its aquatic immature stages, the mayfly (order Ephemeroptera) has all the time in the world—or not quite: among the approximately 2,500 species of mayflies, some have as much as two years, but a year is more common. But in its adult phase, the typical mayfly hatches, takes wing for the first time, mates, and dies within the span of a few short hours. This briefest of heydays makes the insect a potent symbol of life's ephemeral nature. When ephemeral (from the Greek word ephēmeros, meaning "lasting a day") first appeared in print in English in the late 16th century, it was a scientific term applied to short-term fevers, and later, to organisms (such as insects and flowers) with very short life spans. Soon after that, it acquired an extended sense referring to anything fleeting and short-lived, as in "ephemeral pleasures."



Name That Synonym

Fill in the blanks to complete a synonym of ephemeral: f _ _ a c i _ _ s.

VIEW THE ANSWER

Podcast


More Words of the Day

Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!