英:[flæm'bɔɪəns]
美:[flæmˈbɔɪəns]
英:[flæm'bɔɪəns]
美:[flæmˈbɔɪəns]
flam·boy·ance
flaem boI ns
词根:flambeau
adj.flamboyant 艳丽的;火焰似的;炫耀的
n.flamboyant 凤凰木
flambeau 火炬;有装饰的、华丽的大烛台
noun
exceptional showiness and daring in manner, appearance, or speech.With characteristic flamboyance, he arrived at the gala in a pink tuxedo that matched his limousine.The flamboyance of his electric guitar solo brought the audience to its feet.
1849年,源自 flamboyant 和 -ance。相关词汇: Flamboyancy(1846年)。
The first known use of flamboyance was in 1891
flamingonoun
any of several rosy-white birds with scarlet wings, a very long neck and legs, and a broad bill bent down at the end that are often found wading in shallow water
flamingonoun
any of several rosy-white birds with scarlet wings, a very long neck and legs, and a broad bill bent down at the end that are often found wading in shallow water
flame1 of 2noun
the glowing gas that makes up part of a fire
a state of burning brightly a building in flames
the car burst into flame
a condition or appearance suggesting a flame
the person one is in love with : sweetheart
an old flame
a hostile or rude electronic message
sent me a flame by email
flame2 of 2verb
to burn with a flame : blaze
to burst or break out violently
flaming with anger
to shine brightly
to treat or affect by flame or fireespecially: to sterilize by a flame
to send a hostile or rude electronic message to or about
flame1 of 2noun
the glowing gas that makes up part of a fire
a state of burning brightly a building in flames
the car burst into flame
a condition or appearance suggesting a flame
the person one is in love with : sweetheart
an old flame
a hostile or rude electronic message
sent me a flame by email
flame2 of 2verb
to burn with a flame : blaze
to burst or break out violently
flaming with anger
to shine brightly
to treat or affect by flame or fireespecially: to sterilize by a flame
to send a hostile or rude electronic message to or about
flame1 of 2noun
the glowing gas that makes up part of a fire
a state of burning brightly a building in flames
the car burst into flame
a condition or appearance suggesting a flame
the person one is in love with : sweetheart
an old flame
a hostile or rude electronic message
sent me a flame by email
flame2 of 2verb
to burn with a flame : blaze
to burst or break out violently
flaming with anger
to shine brightly
to treat or affect by flame or fireespecially: to sterilize by a flame
to send a hostile or rude electronic message to or about
flame1 of 2noun
the glowing gas that makes up part of a fire
a state of burning brightly a building in flames
the car burst into flame
a condition or appearance suggesting a flame
the person one is in love with : sweetheart
an old flame
a hostile or rude electronic message
sent me a flame by email
flame2 of 2verb
to burn with a flame : blaze
to burst or break out violently
flaming with anger
to shine brightly
to treat or affect by flame or fireespecially: to sterilize by a flame
to send a hostile or rude electronic message to or about
flamboyantadjective
tending to make a striking display : showy
flamboyantadjective
tending to make a striking display : showy
flamboyancenoun
the quality or state of being flamboyant
1 Dipping into Mexican and Caribbean styles, she brought layers of camp probably best understood in Mexico, but her nutty flamboyance came through clearly.
2 But Papushado’s flamboyance feels cocky and indiscriminate, as if he’s simply trying really hard to make every image seem cool.
3 The fashion tribes, among them emissaries from Prada and Missoni, and mainstream merchants like Anthropology, who have visited the show in the past, may well be indulging a taste for flamboyance, Mr. Orenstein added.
4 Therefore, its floral language is flamboyance.
因此,它的花语就是-华丽。
5 But, despite the pugnacious verbal flamboyance that sets the movie spinning from start to finish, it’s worth watching it with the ears closed—watching it as a sort of silent film.
6 Inge doesn’t have the reputation of his contemporary Tennessee Williams, perhaps because he lacked Williams’s incantatory flamboyance, which encouraged myriad staging possibilities, audience devotion and a thousand campy spoofs.
7 A bit more flamboyance, however, might have sparked up the two piano concertos and the Second and Third Sonata.
8 Mr. Kissin was simply a consummate virtuoso at work, playing with solidity, grace and flair, but with no flamboyance for flamboyance’s sake.
9 With Mr. Sneed’s modernist piano arrangements creating an elevated platform, Mr. Brownlee pushed his voice to its upper limits, slipping in and out of a countertenor, with minimal flamboyance and maximum devotion.
10 Instead, on this modest but certain album, she’s something of a chameleon, and an effective one, showing that versatility is flamboyance, of a sort.
11 “Unlike younger Mafia leaders like John Gotti,” The New York Times wrote in Salerno’s 1992 obituary, “Mr. Salerno typified a more old-fashioned gangster ethic that frowned on flamboyance that might attract attention.”
12 They work because they’re part of the witty, odd flamboyance that characterizes his dance theater, but even more because they’re part of the rhythmic outpouring that turns his dance into music.
13 He likes these names, likes their oddness, their flamboyance.
14 For Mr. Sharkey, who has worked as a fashion photographer, the absorption with flamboyance has given way in recent years to a more ardent pursuit.
15 The movement, the exaggeration, the unashamed flamboyance: This, my friends, is Flemish Baroque art in all its majesty.
16 But in Zava’s case, “it just sort of gave a flavor of some flamboyance,” Levy says.
17 Together, the producer and band honed a shamelessly over-the-top sound that embraced extremes: hard rock’s heaviness, glam rock’s flamboyance and stacked arrangements, and pop music’s gigantic hooks.
18 With her energy, her empathy, her flamboyance, her demands and her love, Bertha creates a devoted family.
19 James Joyce's Ulysses was the very epitome of Radio 4 flamboyance, a finely calculated compromise, erring strongly on the side of caution.
20 Kerouac's is a sort of American Dream 2.0, the frivolity and flamboyance of the twenties replaced with the quiet austerity of a diet of apple pie and lengthy commutes on the railroads.
1 华丽
fine loud gorgeous gay purple brave splendid sporty ornate posh sumptuous luscious glittering gallant opulent gilded doggy exuberant dressy flowery dashing swanky glitzy resplendent swank luxuriant florid bravura splendiferous nobby aureate euphuistic dashy loudly superbly gallantly gaily opulently flower glitter bravery pageant grandeur pomp magnificence opulence glitz pageantry gaiety pomposity luxuriance floweriness floridity theatricalize with a flourish
2 浮夸
vain swollen flamboyant grandiose pompous bombastic boastful flatulent fustian high-blown bombastically pomp flatulence fuss and feathers
3 过分华丽
6 灿烂
bright brilliant gorgeous glorious sparkling shining splendid dazzling glittering flamboyant pyrotechnic effulgent refulgent aglitter gemmy fulgent splendent irradiant brilliantly gorgeously radiantly resplendently lustrously glow glitter glare splendor irradiance effulgence refulgence resplendence resplendency