Similar words: braggart, docile, baggage, haggard, craggy, ragged, atrocious, ferocious. Meaning: [‚brægə'dəʊtʃɪəʊ] n. vain and empty boasting.
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1. Er, a best braggadocio is also a 'best'.
2. I must confess there is an element of braggadocio : a marathon is something that will be accomplished only by a small subset of society.
3. He was disliked because his manner was always full of braggadocio.
4. City traders no longer use the M25 as a racetrack, but that mood of braggadocio survives in certain quarters, undented by recent events.
5. At the same time, Golden throws in his own style of underground silliness here, some mild braggadocio there, and a little touch of street ruggedness on the side.
6. On the Republican side, foreign policy talk is all bluster and braggadocio.
7. In a claim island village, a youngter used to shout “Priate is coming” at morning, next, people was foul-mouthed and came out with broom to chase that braggadocio.
8. Fink: american frontiersman and folk hero known for his marksmanship, fighting skills, and braggadocio.
9. In the end, there might be some signs that boorish boys know they’re overreaching — and that may be expressed in the level of their braggadocio.
More similar words: braggart, docile, baggage, haggard, craggy, ragged, atrocious, ferocious, bravado, scraggly, straggle, precocious, bag and baggage, bedraggled, umbrage, aficionado, gadget, gadfly, brigade, renegade, dock, reggae, beggar, doctor, docked, sluggard, niggardly, doctrine, document, synecdoche.