0 not supporting any particular political party
1 used to describe a currency's exchange rate that is not fixed in relation to another:
It sits somewhere in the middle, between church and people, as a sort of free-floating structure of ideas.
More so than the writer, the artist, or even the free-floating intellectual, the scientist's discipline constrained him to retreat from any standpoint.
They are, or are akin to, free-floating evils.
Immunohistochemistry experiments were carried out on free-floating sections.
Not all free-floating voices in the film, however, are endowed with this subversive power.
It is tempting, then, to settle on music as free-floating, drifting in some unspecified, inter-diegetic territory: there is something signified, but nothing precise or recoverable.
It seems reasonable to conclude, then, that what makes customary norms eligible for incorporation into a legal system is that they are free-floating.
The tendency for opinions about democracy-in-practice to be sensitive to the ups-and-downs of the transition does not make relatively free-floating beliefs in democracy-in-principle less real.