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Evanescent vs Exigent - What's the difference?

evanescent | exigent |

As adjectives the difference between evanescent and exigent

is that evanescent is vanishing, disappearing while exigent is urgent; needing immediate action.

As a noun exigent is

extremity; end; limit; pressing urgency.

evanescent

English

Adjective

(en adjective)
  • Vanishing, disappearing.
  • * 1837 , , "Footprints on the Sea-Shore" in Twice-Told Tales :
  • The sea was each little bird's great playmate. . . . In their airy flutterings, they seemed to rest on the evanescent spray.
  • * 1911 , , Initials Only , ch. 19:
  • . . . making the ideal of my foolish girlhood seem as unsubstantial and evanescent as a dream in the glowing noontide.
  • Ephemeral, momentary, fleeting.
  • * 1851 , , Moby Dick , ch. 46:
  • In times of strong emotion mankind disdain all base considerations; but such times are evanescent .
  • Barely there; almost imperceptible.
  • * 1888 , , "The Withered Arm":
  • Her face too was fresh in colour, but it was of a totally different quality—soft and evanescent , like the light under a heap of rose-petals.
  • * 1907 , , The Secret Agent , ch. 7:
  • While he was speaking the hands on the face of the clock behind the great man's back—a heavy, glistening affair of massive scrolls in the same dark marble as the mantelpiece, and with a ghostly, evanescent tick—had moved through the space of seven minutes.
  • * 1916 , , Twilight in Italy , ch. 1:
  • And I was pale, and clear, and evanescent , like the light, and they were dark, and close, and constant, like the shadow.

    Synonyms

    * See also

    See also

    * evanescence ----

    exigent

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • Urgent; needing immediate action.
  • * 2003 , , U.S. Department of Defence
  • Article 2 also provides that acts of torture cannot be justified on the grounds of exigent circumstances, such as state of war or public emergency, or on orders from a superior officer or public authority.
  • Demanding; needing great effort.
  • Derived terms

    * allocatur exigent

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (archaic) Extremity; end; limit; pressing urgency
  • * 1591 ,
  • These eyes, like lamps whose wasting oil is spent, \ Wax dim, as drawing to their exigent ;
  • * 1611 ,
  • Therefore as one complaineth, that always in the Senate of Rome, [Cicero 5° de finibus.] there was one or other that called for an interpreter: so lest the Church be driven to the like exigent , it is necessary to have translations in a readiness.
  • (obsolete, UK, legal) The name of a writ in proceedings before outlawry.
  • (Abbott)