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English

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Adjective

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darting (comparative more darting, superlative most darting)

  1. Characterized by sudden, quick movements.
    • 1905, Joseph Isaac Spadafora Whitaker, The Birds of Tunisia, page 221:
      Its flight is fairly swift, and at times very darting or jerky.
    • 1989, James Tyler Kent, Lectures on Homoeopathic Materia Medica, page 429:
      Violent darting pains in the head preventing sleep.
    • 2012, Jessica Stirling, The Haldanes:
      Stella was very quick, very darting.

Derived terms

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Verb

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darting

  1. present participle and gerund of dart

Noun

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darting (plural dartings)

  1. A motion or gesture that darts.
    • 1973, Oliver Sacks, Awakenings:
      During this period, a different set of abnormal mouth-movements made their appearance: forced protrusions of the lips, propulsion of the tongue, and occasional choreic dartings of the tongue.
    • 2000, Alan Bennett, Writing Home:
      Jane Gibson taught the cast the movements of the various creatures they were representing: the linear shufflings of the hedgehogs, the dozy lollopings of the rabbits, the sinuous dartings of the weasel and so on.

Anagrams

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