0 very confident in behaviour, and liking to be noticed by other people, for example because of the way you dress, talk, etc. -- 炫耀的;卖弄的
Why were evangelicalism's most flamboyant figures so attentive to the leering and the lurid ?
A flamboyant, tacky or outdated piece of clothing.
One must not take too much notice of the flamboyant language of a colonel in the field.
We were never so flamboyant about these things in our time; we did it without so much talking about it.
We have suffered considerably as a result of these wide and sometimes flamboyant, generalisations about other industries which are then applied to the mining industry.
Surely, if my language was sonorous, his was flamboyant.
The money in credit unions is used by members not for the flamboyant material things of life but for furniture, holidays or household essentials.
Perhaps he is too flamboyant for this day and age.