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单词 flamboyant
释义

flamboyant1

adjective flamˈbɔɪəntˌflæmˈbɔɪ(j)ənt
  • 1(of a person or their behaviour) tending to attract attention because of their exuberance, confidence, and stylishness.

    the band's flamboyant lead singer
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Did the flamboyant personality on television elbow his way into the spotlight, or was he maligned by the newspaper?
    • The inmates, mostly flamboyant personalities who lived by their supervillain identities, were stripped of any identity but their prisoner numbers.
    • She was a seriously flamboyant person, in dress and in sport.
    • Lee's flamboyant personality and quick, cool, dry wit are trademarks of this great man of musical theatre.
    • The other type loud and flamboyant, gregarious and unrestrained, life-loving and vigorous, passionate and strong.
    • He was flamboyant, selfish and wildly misogynist.
    • So tearing my eyes away, I paid attention to what my flamboyant friend was saying.
    • He's quite flamboyant and I'm the opposite of that.
    • The silent ones often seemed to drive the oldest and slowest cars on the road while the more flamboyant drivers were in cars which seemed to mirror their owner's extravagant character.
    • Fitting his flamboyant personality, he led the way with his own choice of costume, a rainbow-coloured cope and mitre, which he had designed and made for the occasion.
    • He was this wonderful flamboyant person, very funny, and he had lots of energy.
    • Tragically, he died just a few months later in a plane crash and the world of golf lost its most flamboyant personality.
    • She was embarrassed by what she called my flamboyant behaviour.
    • Whilst the guitarist needs to suffer for his art more and lose the baseball cap, you only notice this because their singer is a flamboyant individual.
    • The very popular and flamboyant politician has been leaving everyone in his wake in the competition in recent years and the word is that a major effort will be made to dethrone him this year.
    • Sometimes he is wildly flamboyant, sometimes sly and coy.
    • A flamboyant personality with a personal touch, most that had never even met him felt that they knew him as a friend.
    • The colourful and flamboyant solicitor, famous for his Cuban cigars, quick wit, and genial sense of devilment, attained folk hero status among the showbiz fraternity.
    • British sculptor, painter, and designer, a flamboyant personality whose flair for self-publicity has helped him become the most famous British artist of his generation.
    • However, the flamboyant politician, who was made deputy president in 1999 and is reportedly in debt, is remembered by colleagues as being careless with money.
    Synonyms
    ostentatious, exuberant, confident, lively, buoyant, animated, energetic, vibrant, vivacious, extravagant, theatrical, showy, swashbuckling, dashing, rakish
    informal over the top (OTT), fancy-pants
    1. 1.1 Bright, colourful, and very noticeable.
      a flamboyant bow tie
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The atmosphere was electric as they took to the stage in bright glittering and flamboyant costumes.
      • The staging just about passes muster and it is enlivened by vivid sets and flamboyant costumes.
      • The sleeves and gowns balloon out with layers of lace in an overstated and flamboyant style.
      • But behind the flamboyant colours is a serious message.
      • The Beating Bowel Cancer charity is asking men to wear loud, flamboyant ties and women to wear weird and wonderful scarves or ties in exchange for making donations.
      • Numerous local schools and organisations took part in the event with colourful floats and flamboyant outfits.
      • For day, wide tweed trousers, a crocheted sweater, a poncho and a hat is a great flamboyant look, or a wrap dress and a bright yellow or green tweed coat with blue tights and fabulous shoes.
      • Her formula for stimulating warm thoughts of the tropics by applying flamboyant colours to fluid fabrics is paying off.
      • One TV campaign features a glamorous woman flaunting flamboyant designer clothes in a subway car.
      • The piece is larger than life, with flamboyant colours and a constant play of doors opening and closing in front of rich washes of deep lighting hues - lavender, pink and green.
      • Famous for his flamboyant style, the baron looked drawn and haggard after two nights in police cells.
      • Drag is so colourful, so flamboyant, so sellable - that the complicating factors of class, race, and politics seem like, well, a drag.
      • The festival also promises colourful and flamboyant floral demonstrations.
      • Come dressed in a classy yet flamboyant style, we're after freakish glamour.
      • The seventeenth-century civil wars are a real treat to do with flamboyant plumes, baggy trousers and lots of colour.
      • The garish jackets and flamboyant ties were out in force as more than 2,000 people packed York Minster to celebrate his life.
      • He was already beginning to develop an idiosyncratic and flamboyant style of dress.
      • These vibrant colours and flamboyant designs distinguished Art Deco from previous artistic styles, along with its respect for Japanese heritage and its contribution to modernism.
      • She is strong and passionate, with endless, beaming smiles and deep laughs, a love of bright colours, and a flamboyant style that includes a passion for eye-raising hats.
      • Indian royal ritual and garments with their glittering gold work and flamboyant colours were adopted by Indonesian ruling princes.
      Synonyms
      colourful, brilliantly coloured, brightly coloured, bright, rich, vibrant, vivid
      exciting, dazzling, eye-catching, bold, splendid, resplendent, glamorous
      showy, gaudy, garish, lurid, loud, flashy, brash, ostentatious
      informal jazzy
      dated gay
  • 2Architecture
    Of or denoting a style of French Gothic architecture marked by wavy flame-like tracery and ornate decoration.

    Compare with rayonnant
    Example sentencesExamples
    • To house his accumulation of art and curiosities he bought the hôtel of the abbots of Cluny that had been built in the flamboyant Gothic style around 1500.
    • There are many more examples of this type of flamboyant ironwork tracery sufficient to indicate that the style was rooted in the Low Countries.
    • They rebuilt the old basilica into a grand, very flamboyant Gothic edifice.
    Synonyms
    elaborate, ornate, fancy
    baroque, rococo, arabesque

Derivatives

  • flamboyantly

  • adverbflamˈbɔɪəntliflæmˈbɔɪ(j)əntli
    • He had scruffy dark hair and was dressed flamboyantly, his bright clothes meticulously selected for their colour coordination, if not for their aesthetic appeal.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Everyone knows that there are two types of people in the world: those who grew up wanting to be flamboyantly famous rock stars, and those who wanted to be lawyers or doctors.
      • People approached me to tell me how bold I was for dressing flamboyantly.
      • When the credits rolled, we walked out to the lobby and ran into yet another flamboyantly gay couple - hey, it was Steve and Sean!
      • People who look good in costume do it as often as possible, as flamboyantly as possible, and make everyone else look terrible in comparison.

Origin

Mid 19th century: from French, literally 'flaming, blazing', present participle of flamboyer, from flambe 'a flame'.

  • flagrant from Late Middle English:

    Early senses of flagrant with meanings such as ‘glorious’ and ‘blazing’ were positive. The word comes from the Latin word flagrare ‘to blaze’, as in conflagration (Late Middle English), and is recorded from the late 15th century. Flamboyant (mid 19th century) and flame (Middle English) itself go back to the same root. The Latin original is also found in the phrase in flagrante (delicto) literally ‘in blazing crime’, and usually used to mean that someone has been caught in bed with someone else's partner.

Rhymes

buoyant, clairvoyant

flamboyant2

noun flamˈbɔɪəntˌflæmˈbɔɪ(j)ənt
  • A Madagascan tree with bright red flowers and leaves composed of numerous leaflets, planted as a street tree in the tropics.

    Delonix regia, family Leguminosae

    Also called flame tree
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Depending on the month of your excursion the yellow poui, the red flamboyant, or the lavender jacaranda trees will be in bloom.
    • There are several flamboyants to be found around the city.
    • They're over now and it seems to be the turn of exotics; bauhinias are out and flamboyants will be flaming across gardens and lighting up streets soon.
    • This is due to a phenomenon known as allelopathy where there are chemicals in the leaves, flowers and stems of the flamboyant which inhibit the growth of other plants.
    • Hard landscaped except for an array of flamboyants (a local tropical tree with luxurious orange blossom), the courtyard marks the gradual transition between public and private realms.

Origin

Late 19th century: probably a noun use of the French adjective flamboyant 'blazing' (see flamboyant1).

 
 

flamboyant1

adjectiveˌflæmˈbɔɪ(j)əntˌflamˈboi(y)ənt
  • 1(of a person or their behavior) tending to attract attention because of their exuberance, confidence, and stylishness.

    a flamboyant display of aerobatics
    she is outgoing and flamboyant, continuously talking and joking
    Example sentencesExamples
    • British sculptor, painter, and designer, a flamboyant personality whose flair for self-publicity has helped him become the most famous British artist of his generation.
    • Fitting his flamboyant personality, he led the way with his own choice of costume, a rainbow-coloured cope and mitre, which he had designed and made for the occasion.
    • Whilst the guitarist needs to suffer for his art more and lose the baseball cap, you only notice this because their singer is a flamboyant individual.
    • A flamboyant personality with a personal touch, most that had never even met him felt that they knew him as a friend.
    • He's quite flamboyant and I'm the opposite of that.
    • Sometimes he is wildly flamboyant, sometimes sly and coy.
    • The inmates, mostly flamboyant personalities who lived by their supervillain identities, were stripped of any identity but their prisoner numbers.
    • He was this wonderful flamboyant person, very funny, and he had lots of energy.
    • She was a seriously flamboyant person, in dress and in sport.
    • The colourful and flamboyant solicitor, famous for his Cuban cigars, quick wit, and genial sense of devilment, attained folk hero status among the showbiz fraternity.
    • So tearing my eyes away, I paid attention to what my flamboyant friend was saying.
    • Tragically, he died just a few months later in a plane crash and the world of golf lost its most flamboyant personality.
    • Lee's flamboyant personality and quick, cool, dry wit are trademarks of this great man of musical theatre.
    • The silent ones often seemed to drive the oldest and slowest cars on the road while the more flamboyant drivers were in cars which seemed to mirror their owner's extravagant character.
    • The very popular and flamboyant politician has been leaving everyone in his wake in the competition in recent years and the word is that a major effort will be made to dethrone him this year.
    • She was embarrassed by what she called my flamboyant behaviour.
    • The other type loud and flamboyant, gregarious and unrestrained, life-loving and vigorous, passionate and strong.
    • However, the flamboyant politician, who was made deputy president in 1999 and is reportedly in debt, is remembered by colleagues as being careless with money.
    • Did the flamboyant personality on television elbow his way into the spotlight, or was he maligned by the newspaper?
    • He was flamboyant, selfish and wildly misogynist.
    Synonyms
    ostentatious, exuberant, confident, lively, buoyant, animated, energetic, vibrant, vivacious, extravagant, theatrical, showy, swashbuckling, dashing, rakish
    1. 1.1 (especially of clothing) noticeable because brightly colored, highly patterned, or unusual in style.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He was already beginning to develop an idiosyncratic and flamboyant style of dress.
      • For day, wide tweed trousers, a crocheted sweater, a poncho and a hat is a great flamboyant look, or a wrap dress and a bright yellow or green tweed coat with blue tights and fabulous shoes.
      • These vibrant colours and flamboyant designs distinguished Art Deco from previous artistic styles, along with its respect for Japanese heritage and its contribution to modernism.
      • Indian royal ritual and garments with their glittering gold work and flamboyant colours were adopted by Indonesian ruling princes.
      • The atmosphere was electric as they took to the stage in bright glittering and flamboyant costumes.
      • The sleeves and gowns balloon out with layers of lace in an overstated and flamboyant style.
      • The piece is larger than life, with flamboyant colours and a constant play of doors opening and closing in front of rich washes of deep lighting hues - lavender, pink and green.
      • She is strong and passionate, with endless, beaming smiles and deep laughs, a love of bright colours, and a flamboyant style that includes a passion for eye-raising hats.
      • The garish jackets and flamboyant ties were out in force as more than 2,000 people packed York Minster to celebrate his life.
      • But behind the flamboyant colours is a serious message.
      • Famous for his flamboyant style, the baron looked drawn and haggard after two nights in police cells.
      • The seventeenth-century civil wars are a real treat to do with flamboyant plumes, baggy trousers and lots of colour.
      • Come dressed in a classy yet flamboyant style, we're after freakish glamour.
      • One TV campaign features a glamorous woman flaunting flamboyant designer clothes in a subway car.
      • Numerous local schools and organisations took part in the event with colourful floats and flamboyant outfits.
      • Drag is so colourful, so flamboyant, so sellable - that the complicating factors of class, race, and politics seem like, well, a drag.
      • The Beating Bowel Cancer charity is asking men to wear loud, flamboyant ties and women to wear weird and wonderful scarves or ties in exchange for making donations.
      • The staging just about passes muster and it is enlivened by vivid sets and flamboyant costumes.
      • The festival also promises colourful and flamboyant floral demonstrations.
      • Her formula for stimulating warm thoughts of the tropics by applying flamboyant colours to fluid fabrics is paying off.
      Synonyms
      colourful, brilliantly coloured, brightly coloured, bright, rich, vibrant, vivid
  • 2Architecture
    Of or denoting a style of French Gothic architecture marked by wavy flame-like tracery and ornate decoration.

    Example sentencesExamples
    • There are many more examples of this type of flamboyant ironwork tracery sufficient to indicate that the style was rooted in the Low Countries.
    • They rebuilt the old basilica into a grand, very flamboyant Gothic edifice.
    • To house his accumulation of art and curiosities he bought the hôtel of the abbots of Cluny that had been built in the flamboyant Gothic style around 1500.
    Synonyms
    elaborate, ornate, fancy

Origin

Mid 19th century: from French, literally ‘flaming, blazing’, present participle of flamboyer, from flambe ‘a flame’.

flamboyant2

nounˌflæmˈbɔɪ(j)əntˌflamˈboi(y)ənt
  • another term for "royal poinciana" (see poinciana)
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Depending on the month of your excursion the yellow poui, the red flamboyant, or the lavender jacaranda trees will be in bloom.
    • They're over now and it seems to be the turn of exotics; bauhinias are out and flamboyants will be flaming across gardens and lighting up streets soon.
    • There are several flamboyants to be found around the city.
    • Hard landscaped except for an array of flamboyants (a local tropical tree with luxurious orange blossom), the courtyard marks the gradual transition between public and private realms.
    • This is due to a phenomenon known as allelopathy where there are chemicals in the leaves, flowers and stems of the flamboyant which inhibit the growth of other plants.

Origin

Late 19th century: probably a noun use of the French adjective flamboyant ‘blazing’ (see flamboyant).

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/23 23:26:14