transient: [17] English adapted transient from trānsiēns, the present participle of Latin trānsīre ‘go over’. This was a compound verb formed from the prefix trāns- ‘across, over’ and īre ‘go’ (source also of English coitus, exit, obituary, etc). Also from trānsīre come English trance [14], transit [15], transition [16], transitive [16], and transitory [14]. => coitus, exit, obituary, transit, transitory
transient (adj.)
c. 1600, "transitory, not durable," from Latin transientem (nominative transiens) "passing over or away," present participle of transire "cross over, go over, pass over, hasten over, pass away," from trans- "across" (see trans-) + ire "to go" (see ion). Meaning "passing through a place without staying" is from 1680s. The noun is first attested 1650s; specific sense of "transient guest or boarder" attested from 1857. Related: Transiently.
例文
1. the transient nature of speech
言語のエバネセント
2.Her feeling of depression was transient .
彼女の重苦しい気持ちはすぐに過ぎ去った。
3.In most cases,pain is transient .
ほとんどの場合、痛みは短い。/
4. Transient applications must be simple,clear,and to the point.
一時的な応用は簡単で、明確で、意味が明確でなければならない。
5.Such single-function applications have a posture of their own,the transient posture.