Definition of "aflutter"
aflutter
/əˈflʌt.ə/
adjective
comparative more aflutter, superlative most aflutter
Quotations
An electric guitar lick […] imposed itself in his mind as a major symbol of virility and youth, notes rising like scimitars, aftertones aflutter like birds, the bending of a blues note like the rising arc of an erection.
1999, Oscar Hijuelos, Empress of the Splendid Season, London: Bloomsbury, page 170
In a state of tremulous excitement, anticipation or confusion.
Quotations
[…] in breaks Susan Walker a little more aflutter than usual. The picture is wonderful. Seeing her name in lights is wonderful. Everything is just wonderful.
1930, Moss Hart and George S. Kaufman, Once in a Lifetime, Act III, in Burns Mantle (ed.), The Best Plays of 1930-31, New York: Dodd, Mead, 1931, p. 144