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swagger
[ swag-er ]
verb (used without object)
- to walk or strut with a defiant or insolent air.
- to boast or brag noisily.
verb (used with object)
- to bring, drive, force, etc., by blustering.
noun
- swaggering manner, conduct, or walk; ostentatious display of arrogance and conceit.
swagger
1/ ˈswæɡə /
verb
- intr to walk or behave in an arrogant manner
- introften foll byabout to brag loudly
- rare.tr to force, influence, etc, by blustering
noun
- arrogant gait, conduct, or manner
adjective
- informal.elegantly fashionable
swagger
2/ ˈswæɡə; ˈswæɡɪ /
noun
- other names for swagman
Derived Forms
- ˈswaggering, adjective
- ˈswaggerer, noun
- ˈswaggeringly, adverb
Other Words From
- swagger·er noun
- outswagger verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Origin of swagger1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In their wins over England and Wales, their traditional flamboyance was married with discipline and steel, a hybrid of classic Wallaby swagger and the ruthless efficiency their coach, Joe Schmidt, perfected as coach of Ireland.
The ruthless military officer with the monocle and the swagger stick who sends his men to senseless death and/or turns traitor.
It is a stalwart presence, a swaggering presence, a saving presence.
Peake’s staid and knowing portrayal stands in contrast and complement to that of Petticrew, whose resolute manner vacillates between a flinty swagger and true anguish.
Scherzinger’s reincarnated Norma Desmond, strutting around the stage with the swagger of an Instagram influencer, must be ready at a moment’s notice for her selfie.
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