vibrancy

English

Etymology

From Latin vibrans, present participle of vibrare, equivalent to vibrant +‎ -cy.

Noun

vibrancy (usually uncountable, plural vibrancies)

  1. The quality of being vibrant.
    • 2025 April 9, Jennifer Rankin, “EU to build AI gigafactories in €20bn push to catch up with US and China”, in The Guardian[1], →ISSN:
      In a separate 2024 report, Stanford found that no EU country made the top five for “vibrancy” in AI, a metric that considered private investment, patents and research.

Synonyms