0 someone who proudly talks a lot about himself or herself and his or her achievements or possessions --
He is something of a braggart and has been know to wildly exaggerate his romantic conquests.
He is a self-centered, loud-mouth braggart who likes to take credit for others' work.
Domitian is shown to be a braggart and a cruel egomaniac.
He quickly proves to be little more than a cowardly braggart, but is dedicated to the resistance.
He is meeting death as he met life with courage but with nothing of the braggart.
Agunda, who realizes that she doesn't want to marry such a braggart, asks her father to make him prove this.
His army colleagues reported that he was a liar and braggart, and generally unpopular.
He is ridiculed here as a braggart (lines 822, 1127, 1295).