The Collaborative International Dictionary
Flitty \Flit"ty\, a. [From Flit.]
Unstable; fluttering. [Obs.]
--Dr. H. More.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1640s, from flit (n.) + -y (2). Related: Flittiness.
Wiktionary
a. 1 (context archaic English) unstable, fluttering 2 Ostentatiously effeminate
Usage examples of "flitty".
The funny thing about old Luce, I used to think he was sort of flitty himself, in a way.
I mean I wondered if just maybe I was wrong about thinking be was making a flitty pass at ne.
He wore a flitty little white visor such as fifty-two-year-old women at country clubs and posh Southwestern resorts wear.
She seemed a definite asset, and he wondered why Zylas had not chosen her the first time they had met rather than the hostile and flitty hummingbird, Ialin.
I didn't want to keep laying there on account of he might try something flitty if he thought I couldn't do anything about it or anything.