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The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

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flair n. 1 talent, ability, aptitude, feel, knack, genius, skill,<br />

mind, gift, faculty, propensity, bent, proclivity, facility: He<br />

showed a flair for music at an early age. 2 chic, panache,<br />

dash, ‚lan, ‚clat, style, stylishness, glamour, verve, sparkle,<br />

vitality, elegance, taste, Colloq savvy, pizazz or pizzazz,<br />

Old-fashioned oomph: She dresses with great flair.<br />

flak n. flack, criticism, disapproval, censure, abuse, blame,<br />

aspersion, complaint(s), disapprobation, condemnation, Colloq<br />

brickbats: He took a lot <strong>of</strong> flak from the press for his<br />

comments.<br />

flake n. 1 snowflake; scale, chip, bit, piece, scrap, particle, tuft,<br />

flock, scurf, fragment, shaving, sliver; wafer, lamina,<br />

Technical squama: A flake <strong>of</strong> slate caught him in the eye.<br />

--v. 2 Often, flake <strong>of</strong>f. scale, chip, fragment; Technical<br />

desquamate, exfoliate: <strong>The</strong> paint is flaking <strong>of</strong>f on this side.<br />

3 flake out. a collapse, go to or fall asleep, drop <strong>of</strong>f (to<br />

sleep), pass out, keel over: After the game, I flaked out on<br />

the couch for ten hours. b become flaky, act crazy: He flaked<br />

out when he heard the new record.<br />

flamboyant<br />

adj. 1 elaborate, ornamented, ornate, decorated, embellished,<br />

baroque, rococo, florid: We chose a flamboyant wallpaper with<br />

purple peacocks. 2 extravagant, ostentatious, showy, gaudy,<br />

flashy, dazzling, brilliant, splendid, dashing, rakish,<br />

swashbuckling, jaunty; high, wide, and handsome: With a<br />

flamboyant display <strong>of</strong> swordsmanship, d'Artagnan dispatched his<br />

attacker.<br />

flame n. 1 fire, blaze; conflagration: <strong>The</strong> flame began to lick about<br />

my feet. 2 passion, fervour, ardour, intensity, warmth, fire,<br />

zeal, feverishness, enthusiasm, eagerness: <strong>The</strong> flame <strong>of</strong> love is<br />

still burning. 3 boyfriend, girlfriend, lover, heartthrob,<br />

sweetheart, beau: Linda is an old flame <strong>of</strong> Trevor's.<br />

--v. 4 burn, blaze, glow, flare: Flaming embers from the<br />

chimney set fire to the ro<strong>of</strong>. Here and there civil unrest flamed<br />

up in the countryside.

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