单词 | fastuosity |
释义 | fastuosityn. Now rare. The quality or fact of being fastuous; (originally) haughtiness, arrogance, excessive pride, vanity, or self-importance; (now chiefly) pretentious or ostentatious show of wealth, luxury, or status. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pride > pretension to superiority > [noun] pensifulnessc1450 affectation1548 affection1570 affectedness1622 lady aira1637 fastuousness1649 gentility1650 fastuosity1656 vapouring1656 flatulency1662 hoity-toity1668 pretendingness1701 with an air1701 pretension1706 flatulence1711 uppishness1716 high and mightiness1771 pensieness1825 fine-gentlemanism1831 pretentiousness1838 ambitiousness1845 stuckupishness1853 pretensiveness1859 notion1866 side1870 dog1871 hoity-toityism1881 superiority complex1921 snootiness1932 uppitiness1935 snottiness1973 snoot1984 swag2002 the mind > emotion > pride > ostentation > [noun] boast1297 strut1303 bombancec1325 bobantc1330 bobancec1380 ambitionc1384 oliprancec1390 pretence?a1439 ostentationa1475 pransawtea1500 bravity1546 finesse1549 bravery1573 overlashing1579 brave1596 peacockry1596 garishness1598 maggot ostentation1598 ostent1609 flaunta1625 spectability1637 vantation1637 fastuousness1649 fastuosity1656 finery1656 parade1656 phantastry1656 ostentatiousness1658 éclat1704 pretension1706 braw1724 swell1724 showiness1730 ostensibility1775 fanfaronade1784 display1816 showing off1822 glimmer1827 tigerism1836 peacockery1844 show-off1846 flare1847 peacockism1854 swank1854 tigerishness1869 flashness1888 flamboyance1891 peacockishness1892 flamboyancy1896 swankiness1920 plushness1949 glitziness1982 fantasia- fantastication- 1656 T. Blount Glossographia Fastuosity, disdain, pride. 1678 R. Cudworth True Intellect. Syst. Universe i. i. 53 That new Modle of Ethicks, which hath been obtruded upon the World with so much Fastuosity. 1832 Legality Present Academical Syst. Univ. of Oxf. 57 The whole [sc. of a review] is mere fastuosity: by a few mucrones verborum the Thrasonism will evaporate. 1921 Nature 17 Mar. 70/1 The style [of illustration in a book on painted tombs] is adequate to every requirement, without the fastuosity of luxurious book-making. 1997 S. A. M. Adshead Material Culture in Europe & China 1400–1800 v. 140 The Wan-li period (1573–1620) was notorious for its extravagance and fastuosity, as Mexican and Japanese silver surcharged its economy. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2021; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
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