braggadocio - Wikiwand
Alternative forms
- braggadose (obsolete)
Etymology
After Braggadocchio, boastful character in Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene (1590), apparently a pseudo-Italian coinage.
Pronunciation
Noun
braggadocio (countable and uncountable, plural braggadocios or (archaic) braggadocioes or (rare) braggadocii)
- A braggart.
- Synonyms: blowhard; see also Thesaurus:braggart
1652, Thomas Urquhart, “Εκσκυβαλαυρον (The Jewel)”, in The Works of Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty, Knight, Edinburgh: Thomas Maitland Dundrennan, published 1834, →ISBN, page 217:
[…] the Gasconads of France, Rodomontads of Spain, Fanfaronads of Italy, and Bragadochio brags of all other countries, could no more astonish his invincible heart, then would the cheeping of a mouse a bear robbed of her whelps.
1803 September 27, William Chapman, “To The Public”, in The Hornet (Frederick, Maryland):
Having received an Inſult from Otho H. W. Luckett, for which he refuſed to make the Reparation demanded―I do declare him a Coward, a Bragadochio, and a Fellow, at whom the ☞ Finger of Contempt ſhould always be pointed.
- Empty boasting.
- Synonym: big talk
2018 January 20, Eve Smith, “The techlash against Amazon, Facebook and Google—and what they can do”, in The Economist:
Russia’s use of social media in America’s 2016 presidential race reflected particularly poorly on Facebook, which was seen as doing too little to stamp out deceptive ads and fake news stories. As for nuclear braggadocio on Twitter, let’s not even go there.
Quotations
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:braggadocio.
Derived terms
Translations
empty boasting
- Bulgarian: самохвалство (bg) n (samohvalstvo)
- French: fanfaronnade (fr) f
- German: Angeberei (de) f, Großspurigkeit (de) f
- Greek:
- Ancient Greek: ἀλαζονία f (alazonía) (slang), ἀλαζονεία f (alazoneía)
- Italian: fanfaronata (it) f, smargiassata (it) f
- Polish: bufonada (pl) f, bufoneria (pl) f, samochwalstwo (pl) n
- Russian: хвастовство́ (ru) n (xvastovstvó), бахва́льство (ru) n (baxválʹstvo), понты́ (ru) m pl (pontý)
See also
Further reading
braggadocio on Wikipedia.Wikipedia