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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
momentary
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a momentary pause (=very short)
▪ There was a momentary pause during which Mr Hammond glanced at his wife.
a slight/brief/momentary etc hesitation
▪ There was a slight hesitation in Jamie’s voice.
momentary panic (=panic that does not last long)
▪ Her momentary panic faded.
momentary/temporary/occasional etc lapse
▪ Despite the occasional lapse, this was a fine performance by the young saxophonist.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
lapse
▪ Those who are not must forgive me my momentary lapse into modest mathematical sophistication.
▪ She turned and looked about her, suddenly angered by the mess she had made - by her momentary lapse of control.
▪ More interesting was the momentary lapse of patience by Coach Dave Wannstedt in defending the moves.
pause
▪ Algernon Peckham glanced at him, and there was a momentary pause before he moved on to speak to James Pegg.
▪ Their faces were blue, and their stillness not a mass death but as though a momentary pause in group exercise.
▪ There was a momentary pause, and then the sentence he had typed was repeated in soft tones through the right-hand earpiece.
▪ The momentary pause had turned suspicion into certainty.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Davis was surprised into a momentary silence.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As Father Maier fretted over the course of the meeting, Ray McGovern reveled in his momentary success.
▪ Is this a momentary indicator with no long-term payoff?
▪ Leonie felt a momentary pang of compassion for her wayward granddaughter.
▪ Paige scarcely registered the momentary pain of his possession before spiralling waves of indescribable pleasure took her.
▪ They have a very hard time saying no to momentary pleasures, regardless of the risks or consequences.
▪ Was it all just a year of madness, a momentary dot.con?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Momentary

Momentary \Mo"men*ta*ry\, a. [L. momentarius. See Moment.] Done in a moment; continuing only a moment; lasting a very short time; as, a momentary pang.

This momentary joy breeds months of pain.
--Shak.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
momentary

"lasting a moment," mid-15c., from Latin momentarius "of brief duration," from momentum (see moment).

Wiktionary
momentary

a. 1 last#Verb for only a moment. 2 happen at every moment; perpetual. 3 ephemeral or relatively short-lived.

WordNet
momentary

adj. lasting for a markedly brief time; "a fleeting glance"; "fugitive hours"; "rapid momentaneous association of things that meet and pass"; "a momentary glimpse" [syn: fleeting, fugitive, momentaneous]

Usage examples of "momentary".

It is absolutely not an experience not an experience of momentary states, not an experience of self, not an experience of no-self, not an experience of relaxing, not an experience of surrendering: it is the Empty opening or clearing in which all of those experiences come and go, an opening or clearing that, were it not always already perfectly Present, no experiences could arise in the first place.

Reflect upon the continual, wearisome pregnancies, the price of a momentary and I may say aleatory pleasure.

Her Altiplano conscience worried about the quickness with which her retrained neurons pushed away that momentary pang of guilt, and she grinned mentally at it.

Had not a momentary impulse tempted me to sing my favorite ditty to the harpsichord, to beguile the short interval, during which my hostess was conversing with her visitor in the next apartment, I should have speeded to New-York, have embarked for Europe, and been eternally severed from my friend, whom I believed to have died in phrenzy and beggary, but who was alive and affluent, and who sought me with a diligence, scarcely inferior to my own.

Foye, in her buxom cheeriness, was drawn to give some of it forth to the uncouth-looking, companionless girl, and not only began a chat with her, after the momentary stir in the street was over, and she had settled herself upon her stool, and leaning her back against a tree, set vigorously to work again at knitting a stout blue yarn stocking, but also treated Bubby and Baby to some bits of her sweet merchandise, and told them about the bears and the monkeys that had gone by, shut up in the gay, red-and-yellow-painted wagons.

There was a momentary standoff, then Cas tilted his head to crack his neck.

The momentary reflection of light revealed his prey, namely a frumpish woman in her middle years making a tottery way through the dark of the night.

This momentary fear infuriated him, fuelling his determination to conquer the giant.

His momentary feeling of astonishment, however, gave way to his eagerness to follow up the hexapod, and he continued burrowing like a ferret.

Though Jacques, the kindliest soul imaginable, was genuinely fond of his Master, I should very much like to know what was going through his mind, if not on the spur of the moment, then at least when he had checked that the fall had done no serious damage, and whether he was able to suppress a momentary twinge of secret exultation prompted by an accident which would teach his Master what it was like to have an injured knee.

There was a momentary truce between the jarheads and sailors blocking the doorway.

He had a momentary glimpse of a skull rolling away from his foot, jawless and unable to grin.

Among the Maniacs As the lions swarmed over her protectors, Bertha Kircher shrank back in the cave in a momentary paralysis of fright super-induced, perhaps, by the long days of terrific nerve strain which she had undergone.

Bertha Kircher experienced a sudden reaction from the momentary exaltation of her recent promise to the Englishman.

Ragnar returned to renew his suit, and Krake, satisfied that she had inspired no momentary passion, forsook the aged couple and accompanied the great viking to Hledra, where she became queen of Denmark.