Word Meanings - FLAUNT - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To throw or spread out; to flutter; to move ostentatiously; as, a flaunting show. You flaunt about the streets in your new gilt chariot. Arbuthnot. One flaunts in rags, one flutters in brocade. Pope.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of FLAUNT)
- Display
- Show
- exhibit
- unfold
- evidence
- evince
- flaunt
- vault
- expose
- ostentation
- spread out
- parade
- Parade
- Vaunt
- display
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of FLAUNT)
Related words: (words related to FLAUNT)
- SPREADINGLY
, adv. Increasingly. The best times were spreadingly infected. Milton. - EXHIBITION
The act of administering a remedy. (more info) 1. The act of exhibiting for inspection, or of holding forth to view; manifestation; display. 2. That which is exhibited, held forth, or displayed; also, any public show; a display of works of art, - EXHIBITIONER
One who has a pension or allowance granted for support. A youth who had as an exhibitioner from Christ's Hospital. G. Eliot. - EXPOSER
One who exposes or discloses. - SUPPRESSOR
One who suppresses. - VAUNT
To boast; to make a vain display of one's own worth, attainments, decorations, or the like; to talk ostentatiously; to brag. Pride, which prompts a man to vaunt and overvalue what he is, does incline him to disvalue what he has. Gov. of Tongue. - VAULTING
1. The act of constructing vaults; a vaulted construction. 2. Act of one who vaults or leaps. - CONCEALED
Hidden; kept from sight; secreted. -- Con*ceal"ed*ly (, adv. -- Con*ceal"ed*ness, n. Concealed weapons , dangerous weapons so carried on the person as to be knowingly or willfully concealed from sight, -- a practice forbidden by statute. - UNFOLDER
One who, or that which, unfolds. - VAULTY
Arched; concave. "The vaulty heaven." Shak. - EVINCE
1. To conquer; to subdue. Error by his own arms is best evinced. Milton. 2. To show in a clear manner; to prove beyond any reasonable doubt; to manifest; to make evident; to bring to light; to evidence. Common sense and experience must and will - DISPLAYER
One who, or that which, displays. - OSTENTATION
1. The act of ostentating or of making an ambitious display; unnecessary show; pretentious parade; -- usually in a detractive sense. "Much ostentation vain of fleshly arm." Milton. He knew that good and bountiful minds were sometimes inclined to - EXPOSEDNESS
The state of being exposed, laid open, or unprotected; as, an exposedness to sin or temptation. - EVIDENCER
One whi gives evidence. - UNFOLDMENT
The acct of unfolding, or the state of being unfolded. The extreme unfoldment of the instinctive powers. C. Morris. - VAUNTER
One who vaunts; a boaster. - RETIRER
One who retires. - EXPOSE
1. To set forth; to set out to public view; to exhibit; to show; to display; as, to expose goods for sale; to expose pictures to public inspection. Those who seek truth only, freely expose their principles to the test, and are pleased to have them - RETIREMENT
1. The act of retiring, or the state of being retired; withdrawal; seclusion; as, the retirement of an officer. O, blest Retirement, friend of life's decline. Goldsmith. Retirement, rural quiet, friendship, books. Thomson. 2. A place of seclusion - INEVIDENCE
Want of evidence; obscurity. Barrow. - ENVAULT
To inclose in a vault; to entomb. Swift. - BEDSPREAD
A bedquilt; a counterpane; a coverlet. - INSUPPRESSIBLE
That can not be suppressed or concealed; irrepressible. Young. -- In`sup*press"i*bly, adv. - INCONCEALABLE
Not concealable. "Inconcealable imperfections." Sir T. Browne. - AVAUNTOUR
A boaster. Chaucer. - DISPREAD
To spread abroad, or different ways; to spread apart; to open; as, the sun dispreads his beams. Spenser. - CROSS-VAULTING
Vaulting formed by the intersection of two or more simple vaults.