flouter


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Related to flouter: floater

flout

 (flout)
tr.v. flout·ed, flout·ing, flouts
1. To ignore or disregard (a rule or convention, for example) in an open or defiant way: flout a law; behavior that flouted convention. See Usage Note at flaunt.
2. Archaic To express contempt for; mock or jeer at.

[Perhaps from Middle English flouten, to play the flute, from Old French flauter, from flaute, flute; see flute.]

flout′er n.
flout′ing·ly adv.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.flouter - someone who jeers or mocks or treats something with contempt or calls out in derisionflouter - someone who jeers or mocks or treats something with contempt or calls out in derision
disagreeable person, unpleasant person - a person who is not pleasant or agreeable
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In the Metamorphoses, the imprudent actions of Mestra's father Erysichthon, a flouter of divine authority, prompt her shape-shifting career.
"I'm big on one-pieces like dresses and jumpsuits, because they look pulled together with the least amount of effort," says the dedicated flouter of fashion rules.
Tuoi Tre 2011, 'Authorities Slap Light Penalty on Decency Flouter', Tuoi Tre online, 3 September, http://tuoitrenews.vn/cmlink/tuoitrenews/lifestyle/authorities-slap-light-penalty-on-decency flouter-1.44202.
Jeremy Hutchinson of gator-attack and campaign-fund-violation renown and State Treasurer Martha Shoffner, flouter of legislative subpoenas and target of a criminal investigation over her handling of state money.
One thing remains the same, however: North Korea, long known as a counterfeiter of dollars and flouter of international law, still isn't playing by the rules, Mickey Mouse or not.
The American protagonist has been typically construed as a self-defining and self-propelling maverick, flouter, drifter or renegade beyond normal human ties.
And rather than seeing Cervantes as an "innovator through tradition," I saw him precisely as a flouter of inherited aesthetic practices or values--precisely something against which Avellaneda reacts, in my reading, when composing his own continuation.
"What," we asked ourselves, "is the common ground that we might all share?" Our love of tweed and port seemed too thin in itself, but, I believe, was a clue towards a SOON, DOUBT, MISANTHROPES CLUB GATHERING ROUND PUB TELLY WATCH CELEBRITY', ,,,, THAT PEERLESS SHOWCASE ALL FAILINGS personal world view that has its origins in an antipathy for the conventions and mores of recent times that is seen as perverse by some (if not many) and has led to accusations of being a certain type of individual; a carper, caviller, egoist, pessimist, flouter, misogamist, mocker.
JEM believes that unity is more important rather than just desirable given the fact that the National congress party (NCP) Government of Sudan (GOS) is a serial violator of peace agreements and a persistent flouter of the rule of law and can not be trusted, unless there is an integrated unity of the Darfurian factions under one umbrella on one side of the negotiating table facing the only one opponent, the NCP.
And an isolated flouter of federal authority likely faced an unusually high risk of prosecution.