0 past simple and past participle of flutter --
1 to make a series of quick delicate movements up and down or from side to side, or to cause something to do this: --
2 If your heart or stomach flutters, you feel slightly uncomfortable because you are excited or nervous: --
The results were that the wings fluttered a bit.
She is wearing a very long, fluttered grey dress which is blown up and down during the scene by special wind effects.
He had a trick eyelid that every once in a while fluttered shut on him.
The number of residents in the community fluttered around 6,000 most of the decade, and several hundred vacant lots dotted the streets.
Didn't you wonder why it never fluttered or moved when the wind blew?
An image fluttered across his mind's eye, causing him to pause, and giving him a moment's worth of peace.
The emery board and a piece of sandpaper flew out of his pocket and fluttered to the ground.
Some of those who have fluttered have broken wings and some of us have had to pick up the broken wings and the broken homes.