0 present participle of swagger --
1 to walk or behave in a way that shows that you are very confident and think that you are important: --
The band's image of themselves as swaggering, pioneering visionaries meant employing a backwards perspective instead of looking forward.
Often the suspension is modified so the front end sits slightly higher than the rear end, giving the car a swaggering appearance.
The deafening, swaggering roar of their music was made to be loud, fast, and as sweaty as possible.
His name became a byword for a swaggering fool.
The book is crammed with bragging and swaggering, pseudoscientific bombast, platitudes and vulgarities, and a great deal of sheer nonsense.
He added that the album spends more time on the softer side in comparison to the swaggering of most of his previous albums.
He inhabits it fully, strutting and swaggering and even, spoofing himself.
Everybody else would do the same, and then you may get a captain away in a far-off sea, perhaps a little elated on occasions, swaggering with his armed merchantman.