0 the quality of being very confident in your behaviour, and liking to be noticed by other people, for example because of the way you dress or talk:
There was a flamboyance in the way he waved his arms to illlustrate a point.
Disraeli's clothes changed from the colourful flamboyance of youth to the sombre colours of old age.
The flamboyance of food presentation in the early nineteenth century rapidly approached vulgarity.
Recent discussions of honour have focused on chivalric flamboyance, or gender-based variations, or humanist virtue, or assertion of birth, blood, and status, or loyalty, as essential elements in its definition.
Certainly his speech, to use a phrase of his own, had volume, thrust and flamboyance.
I cannot compete with the decibels and the flamboyance.
The cosmetics market is full of fanciful promises and quasi-scientific mumbo-jumbo, where the copywriter's verbal flamboyance is the only yardstick in testing the product's efficacy.
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extravagancia…
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caractère flamboyant…
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kesemarakan…
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überladener Schmuck…
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(farge)prakt, overlessethet…
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nádhera, okázalost…
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prangen…
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l’essere sgargiante…
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