Flamboyant
in sentence
56 examples of Flamboyant in a sentence
That, and Hank Azaria's character Spartacus, a
flamboyant
Greek housekeeper for Armand and Albert.
Not a drug in this world can offer you such a dangerously intoxicating and
flamboyant
trip as Paul Grau's "Mad Foxes".
The performances here are all excellent especially Jane Wyman and Marlene Dietrich as Charlotte Inwood, perhaps the laziest girl in town but also the most
flamboyant.
Antonio Fargas also appears in a brief, and of course,
flamboyant
role.
Or is the movie really about a
flamboyant
would-be gangster named Goldie (Rudy Ray Moore) maintaining his control over a community through force?
The plot is derivative of approximately fifteen other early 80's slasher films, the soundtrack is nefarious (for the last time: heavy-metal and suspense rarely mix!), the characters are insupportable stereotypes and the maniacal killer (yet another evil clown) is the complete opposite of menacing, with his lame one-liners and overly
flamboyant
outfit.
It's as incomprehensible as the previous movie, "Murderers' Row", but lacks the ambiance of a French locale or the
flamboyant
villain that saved that one.
Williams learns from his son that his fiancée's parents (Gene Hackman, Dianne Wiest) are straight-laced and ultra-conservative and will not be comfortable meeting his gay father or his even more
flamboyant
lover (Nathan Lane) and suggests Williams send Lane out of town while Hackman and Wiest are in town.
Listening to Obama’s reflexive and distant speeches on Libya, one can nearly hear French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin’s
flamboyant
intervention at the United Nations on the eve of the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
With hard times approaching, will Cristina try to be a twenty-first-century Evita and create an epic by exploiting Argentines’
flamboyant
tendencies, armed with an exceptional power or will she adopt Rouseff’s sensible attitude and combat inefficiency and corruption while strengthening governmental institutions?
Hollande’s victory thus may be a sign that democratic countries have become reluctant to be led by
flamboyant
or charismatic presidents or prime ministers.
The flamboyant, jewelry-bedecked Singh calls himself Baba Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh Insan – a compound of Hindu, Muslim, and Sikh names, followed by the word for “Human” in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu.
The party founded by the
flamboyant
populist Pim Fortuyn is now the second largest in the Dutch legislature.
The mass media, for instance, pick up on the
flamboyant
queens and dykes who participate in gay pride parades.
It also reassures the French business community, which was shocked by Dominique de Villepin’s
flamboyant
opposition to the United States when he was Chirac’s foreign minister.
His abysmal human rights record remains, but the
flamboyant
“Guide of the Revolution” ceased flirting with weapons of mass destruction and global terrorism in exchange for the end of sanctions and international rehabilitation.
But how realistic is it to expect so driven and
flamboyant
a man to stay away from the limelight?
Although de Villepin’s speeches are more
flamboyant
than those of most political leaders, the underlying sentiment extends far beyond France.
The prototype of modern European populism was the
flamboyant
Dutch political showman Pim Fortuyn, who was assassinated in 2002 by a fanatical vegan.
Trying to reach over the head of the
flamboyant
and unpredictable leader of the Smallholders, Jozsef Torgyan, Orban recently lavished praise on the "wisdom, loyalty and importance of the agrarian population," the core of Smallholder support.
French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin’s
flamboyant
speech at the United Nations encapsulated the “spirit of resistance” against what proved to be a dangerous adventure.
Will Dominique de Villepin, the
flamboyant
former prime minister under Jacques Chirac, be to Sarkozy what Chirac was to Valéry Giscard d’Estaing in 1981?
Mussa was also remarkable for a
flamboyant
presentation of his views, which was hard for some IMF folk to tolerate in so stuffy environment.
Mitt Romney, in a milder, less
flamboyant
manner, has appealed to these sentiments as well: he knew how to run an investment company, so why not the US federal government?
And he neutralizes the Clintons’ famous skill at corrosive sniping and
flamboyant
stage-hogging – the kind that led Al Gore and Bill Clinton to be on barely speaking terms during the 2000 Presidential campaign.
The accession of a
flamboyant
businessman, Donald Trump, to the US presidency is evidence of the strength of many Americans’ identification with business heroes.
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