英:['fleɪgrənsɪ]
美:['fleɪgrənsɪ]
英:['fleɪgrənsɪ]
美:['fleɪgrənsɪ]
noun
the quality or state of being flagrant
The first known use of flagrancy was in 1599
1 While most of the world thinks this is a rockstar gimmick, his flagrancy irks the other undead, who plot to kill him.
2 For the flagrancy of the Fairouz sins, the café’s managers would have been detained, questioned, and punished.
3 The disclosure also shines a bare lightbulb on the flagrancy (and, in some cases, stupidity) of the unfaithful.