1. soaring - Noun
2. soaring - Adjective
3. soaring - Verb
5. soaring - Adjective Satellite
of Soar
a. & n. from Soar.
Source: Webster's dictionaryMy own brain is to me the most unaccountable of machinery - always buzzing, humming, soaring roaring diving, and then buried in mud. And why? What's this passion for? Virginia Woolf
Since I have spread my wings to purpose high, The more beneath my feet the clouds I see, The more I give the winds my pinions free, Spurning the earth and soaring to the sky. Giordano Bruno
A poet soaring in the high reason of his fancies, with his garland and singing robes about him. John Milton
There is no more hollow feeling than to stand with your honor shattered at your feet while soaring public reputation wraps you in rewards. That's soul-destroying. The other way around is merely very, very irritating. Lois McMaster Bujold
Man's hope can paint a purple picture, can transform a soaring vulture into a noble eagle or a moaning dove. Ralph Ellison
...if sometimes we are bogged down in lines full of "corybulous”, "hypogeum”, "plangent”, "irrefragably”, "glozening”, "tellurian”, "conclamant”, sometimes we are caught up in the soaring rapture of something unprecedented, absolutely individual. Randall Jarrell