The schooners moored to the quay are trim and neat, the little town along the bay is white and urbane, and the flamboyants, scarlet against the blue sky,
flaunt their colour like a cry of passion.
The chief pleasure and necessity of such men, when they encounter anyone who shows animation, is to
flaunt their own dreary, persistent activity.
She did hope it truly, and believed it, but she was afraid it was in the nature of a challenge to Providence to
flaunt your happiness too openly.
He felt only hate for her, but it had come to his diseased mind that if he could force her to accede to his demands as the price of her life and her child's, the cup of his revenge would be filled to brimming when he could
flaunt the wife of Lord Greystoke in the capitals of Europe as his mistress.
She's sweetly pretty, but I don't think it's nice of you to
flaunt her before us middle-aged people.
Here the Company were quartered in a scattered mountain hamlet, and Alleyne spent the day looking down upon the swarming army which poured with gleam of spears and
flaunt of standards through the narrow pass.
Mayflowers, you must know, never
flaunt themselves; they must be sought as becomes them, and then they will yield up their treasures to the seeker--clusters of star-white and dawn-pink that have in them the very soul of all the springs that ever were, re- incarnated in something it seems gross to call perfume, so exquisite and spiritual is it.
Over it
flaunted a Union Jack, flapping cheerfully in the morning breeze.
It
flaunted to and fro with the swell and reflux of the waves, and looked as bright and beautiful as if its leaves were gold.
Pale-golden and vermilion orchids
flaunted their unhealthy blossoms in the golden, dripping sunshine that filtered through the matted roof.
The blood surged into his face, wave upon wave, mastering the bronze of it till the blush of shame
flaunted itself from collar-rim to the roots of his hair.
For the following paragraph, which should have inaugurated the narrative, is too wildly extravagant and preposterous to be
flaunted in the face of the reader without preparation.