fugitiveness


fu·gi·tive

F0352000 (fyo͞o′jĭ-tĭv)adj.1. a. Running away or fleeing, as from the law.b. Of or relating to fugitives: "My brother ... was on the fugitive squad, tracking draft dodgers" (James Carroll).2. a. Lasting only a short time; fleeting: "[His] house and burial place ... should be visited by all who profess even a fugitive interest in political economy" (John Kenneth Galbraith).b. Difficult to comprehend or retain; elusive: fugitive solutions to the problem.c. Given to change or disappearance; perishable: fugitive beauty; fugitive tint.d. Of temporary interest: "Apart from juvenilia and fugitive verses, his poetic legacy consists of only some seventy poems" (Daniel Hoffman).3. Wandering or tending to wander; vagabond: "We also chanced upon fugitive monks, penniless pilgrims and tradesmen" (Jeanne Marie Laskas).n.1. A person who flees, especially from a legal process, persecution, or danger.2. Something fleeting or ephemeral.
[Middle English fugitif, from Old French, from Latin fugitīvus, from fugitus, past participle of fugere, to flee.]
fu′gi·tive·ly adv.fu′gi·tive·ness n.