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bravado

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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FromFrenchbravade(bragging or boasting), fromItalianbravata, from verbbravare(brag, boast), frombravo.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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bravado (countable anduncountable,pluralbravadosorbravadoes)

  1. Aswaggeringshow ofdefiance orcourage.
    The angry customer stood in the middle of the showroom and voiced his complaints with loudbravado.
    • 1891,Rosa Mulholland,The Haunted Organist of Hurly Burly,page12:
      For abravado he had the organ taken down and conveyed to his father's house, where he had it put up in the chamber where it now stands. It was also for abravado that he played on it every day. But, by−and−by, the amount of time which he spent at it daily began to increase rapidly.
    • 1990 Amy Longsdorf, K.T. Oslin: Personality, Wit and Style To Spare",The Morning Call[1]
      Songs like "Hey Bobby", and "Do Ya" drip with innuendo and sexualbravado.
    • 2019 May 12, Alex McLevy, “Westeros faces a disastrous final battle on the penultimate Game of Thrones (newbies)”, inThe A.V. Club[2], archived fromthe original on15 May 2019:
      Stripped of allbravado, Cersei breaks, and shows the very scared, vulnerable woman who has kept her emotions at bay. “I don’t want to die,” she whimpers, “Not like this.” It’s all the more moving for coming from a character who built her identity on steely resolve and contempt for such hoary conceits as fear.
    • 2023 February 11, Katharine Gammon, “A mountain of trouble? The draw – and danger – of California’s Mount Baldy”, inThe Guardian[3],→ISSN:
      The rise of SOS devices – satellite-synched gadgets that send a signal to rescue agencies when activated – give peoplebravado, Estrada says. “A lot of people carry these SOS devices and they think they can get into any trouble and they can get help,” he says, adding that he has seen more requests for assistance recently.
    • 2023 April 2, Dan Sabbagh, Ed Ram, “Surrounded and outgunned, Ukraine’s tank crews prepare for battle of Bakhmut”, inThe Guardian[4],→ISSN:
      No doubt there is fear despite thebravado, but there is also no significant loss of Ukrainian military cohesion.
  2. Afalse show of courage.(Can we add anexample for this sense?)
  3. (obsolete) Aswaggerer; abraggart.

Translations

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a show of defiance or courage
a false show of courage

Verb

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bravado (third-person singular simple presentbravados,present participlebravadoing,simple past and past participlebravadoed)

  1. (obsolete, intransitive) Toswagger; tobrag.
Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=bravado&oldid=83638206"
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