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Excessive, as a gala
Answer for the clue "Excessive, as a gala ", 11 letters:
extravagant
Alternative clues for the word extravagant
Word definitions for extravagant in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Exceeding the bounds of something; roving; hence, foreign. 2 extreme; wild; excessive; unrestrained.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Extravagant \Ex*trav"a*gant\, a. [F. extravagant, fr. L. extra on the outside + vagans, -antis, p. pr. of vagari to wander, from vagus wandering, vague. See Vague .] Wandering beyond one's bounds; roving; hence, foreign. The extravagant and erring ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. unrestrained in especially feelings; "extravagant praise"; "exuberant compliments"; "overweening ambition"; "overweening greed" [syn: excessive , exuberant , overweening ] recklessly wasteful; "prodigal in their expenditures" [syn: prodigal , profligate ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a lavish/extravagant lifestyle (= in which you buy or do expensive things ) ▪ How can he afford such a lavish lifestyle? extravagant claims (= clearly not true ) ▪ Some manufacturers make extravagant claims for ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
late 14c., from Medieval Latin extravagantem (nominative extravagans ), originally a word in Canon Law for uncodified papal decrees, present participle of extravagari "wander outside or beyond," from Latin extra "outside of" (see extra- ) + vagari "wander, ...
Usage examples of extravagant.
Perhaps an extravagant fable of the times may conceal an allegorical picture of these fanatics, who tortured each other and themselves.
To say that it was an allopathic pillage would not be an extravagant statement.
The most extravagant legends, as they conduced to the honor of the church, were applauded by the credulous multitude, countenanced by the power of the clergy, and attested by the suspicious evidence of ecclesiastical history.
July flowers, and striped balsamine, singing birds and fluttering insects, full of extravagant beauty.
At the bar and in the senate of Rome the ablest orators were not apprehensive of giving offence to their hearers, by exposing that doctrine as an idle and extravagant opinion, which was rejected with contempt by every man of a liberal education and understanding.
The proprietor of the borough, a good humoured sporting extravagant, has been compelled to yield his influence in St.
A small herd of giant deer, whose extravagant palmate antlers made the large rack of the moose seem small, were feeding along the outer fringe of woolly willows clustered in the damp lowland near the water.
I had tasted of love already, and perhaps you know the extravagant excesses of that most tender and most violent passion.
It is true that it is a relation beset with wildly extravagant illusions for inexperienced people, and that even the most experienced people have not always sufficient analytic faculty to disentangle it from the sentiments, sympathetic or abhorrent, which may spring up through the other relations which are compulsorily attached to it by our laws, or sentimentally associated with it in romance.
He wore an extravagant suit of shirred and ruffled black silk and dancing shoes covered with gold sequins.
Moreover, the most extravagant eulogies were perhaps reserved for those who had died in battle against the hated foe, none more sublimely than the Marquis de Montcalm on the heights of Abraham in Quebec.
Yet, while so many unjust and extravagant wills were every day dictated by cunning and subscribed by folly, a few were the result of rational esteem and virtuous gratitude.
My classmates were as unastonished by their extravagant traits as a blowfish is by its quills.
Jack Polgrey, who was an extravagant man compared with his cheeseparing father, had given a harvest dance afterwards and there had been fiddlers in the big barn.
But the Prince had died prematurely at the age of fifty, and with him the Ciceronian traditions had ended in Casa Conti, and their place had been taken by the caprices of the big, healthy, indolent, extravagant Polish woman, by the miserable weaknesses of a degenerate heir, and the fanatic religious practices of Donna Clementina.