It's the word of the day for October 17th.
Today's word is fugaceous, spelled F-U-G-A-C-I-O-U-S.
Fugaceous is an adjective.
It's a formal word that describes something that lasts only a short time.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Londonist by Will Noble.
The Handel and Hendricks House on 23 and 25 Brook Street in central London reopens the 18th of May.
The 18th century German composer George Frederick Handel called number 25 home for some 36 years up until his death in 1759.
Here, he manufactured hits like the Coronation Champions League Belter, Zadok the Priest,
and The Music for the Royal Fireworks, with such voraciousness,
his manuscripts were often bespattered with food and beer stains.
Perhaps you'd equate such sloppiness with Jimi Hendrix.
His tenancy, in a flat at 23 Brook Street, was altogether fugacious.
He was only here from 1968 to 1969, though in that time, used it for countless interviews,
jam sessions, and referred to it as the only place he ever lived that felt like home.
The word fugaceous is too rare and unusual to qualify as vanilla.
But the vanilla plant itself can be useful for recalling its meaning.
Fugaceous, which comes from the Latin fugax, which means swift or fleeting,
and ultimately from fugare, meaning to run away,
describes the ephemeral, that is,
those things in life that last only a brief time before fleeing or fading away.