Why this word is great
BLUETTE — [Noun] A short but scintillating play or other work, or a variety of satinette pigeon with a white body and blue wings. From French bluette, literally 'little spark', diminutive of bleu ('blue') + -ette (diminutive suffix). Unlike 'skit' (which is merely brief and humorous) or 'vignette' (which is evocative but not necessarily luminous), a bluette is a fleeting brilliance—a firefly’s glow in the dusk, the flash of blue wings against a whitewashed barn, or the single perfect line of dialogue that lingers long after the curtain falls. It is the art of the ephemeral, proof that not all sparks must become flames.