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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fleeting fame" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a person or thing that has achieved a brief moment of notoriety, recognition, or success, often within a specific industry or time period. For example: Bruno received fleeting fame when he won a local singing contest, but his career never took off after that.
Exact(45)
There is a tape -- the key to fleeting fame.
It's lucky people are quite so eager for fleeting fame.
De Peyster's fate is an object lesson in the fleeting fame of former mayors.
But he sounded much more accepting of fleeting fame than Keats did.
An hour later, Levin, who turned 20 on Tuesday, found how fleeting fame can be.
I will take lasting and ultimate glory over the fleeting fame of a division title.
Similar(15)
Opera has known its fleeting fames and forgotten masterpieces, but "Don Giovanni" is not among them.
Hodges's close encounter left her with severe bruising – and fleeting worldwide fame.
Don't allow yourself to be exploited by something as fleeting as fame and fortune.
While viral videos are often associated only with fleeting internet fame, their ability to affect more weighty issues is currently being put to the test.
Ask your average Food Network viewer or Yelp poster about Craig Claiborne and you're likely to be met with a blank look and a "Who?" How fleeting is fame in the food world.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com