How To Use Boaster In A Sentence

  • The boaster is a well-known character in every Indian village; and it is quite plain from the number of stories warning us against self-praise, that the wise men of the tribe have not been slow to discover and point out this weakness of their people. Wigwam Evenings Sioux Folk Tales Retold
  • Old Kinoos is a brave man, but Old Kinoos was never a boaster. NEGORE, THE COWARD
  • The synonyms were spot-on: big mouth, blusterer, boaster, braggart, line-shooter, loudmouth, and — my personal favorite — vaunter. 2010 August « Motivated Grammar
  • Henry Fleming, the youth who is the protagonist of this thrillingly realistic drama of war, has for deuteragonist Wilson, the loud young boaster.
  • A boaster and a liar are all one. 
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  • I'm sure I'd be a very good boaster, if I got the chance.
  • If you are not rich or a fanatical figure spewing lies and half truths to boaster support, getting them votes, they have no interest in you or hearing your views. Blue Dog will vote against bill with public option
  • He refused to believe what he thought impossible, but honour obliged him to call the boaster to the field. The Gaming Table: Its Votaries and Victims, In All Times and Countries, especially in England and in France
  • I can remember that I was both a coward and a boaster; but I have frequently remarked that the quality which we call cowardice in Frank Mildmay Or, The Naval Officer
  • A quiet lad he was and not a boaster and braggart like lots o 'people seem to think. Heinold's First and Last Chance Saloon
  • The synonyms were spot-on: big mouth, blusterer, boaster, braggart, line-shooter, loudmouth, and — my personal favorite — vaunter. Review: Wordnik’s Thesaurus « Motivated Grammar
  • The tales told in this book were so extravagant that the name Munchausen is often applied to boasters. The Elson Readers, Book 5
  • With regard to truth, then, the intermediate is a truthful sort of person and the mean may be called truthfulness, while the pretence which exaggerates is boastfulness and the person characterized by it a boaster, and that which understates is mock modesty and the person characterized by it mock-modest. The Nicomachean Ethics
  • A boaster and a liar are all one. 
  • He was a boaster of his Vices -- a [illegible] great affecter of licentiousness-and at last got in Love, like a fool, with a Girl, much too good for him. John Adams diary 17, 16 April - 14 June 1771
  • A boaster and a liar are all one. 
  • He sat rebuked in this man's presence -- this man whom, within the hour, he had called boaster and braggart, liar and coward. Allison Bain, or, By a Way she knew not
  • Now, I do not mind being called a boaster, nor a dog either, but when he told me that my verses were not my own, I couldn't contain myself, so I told him he lied, whereupon he flung a glass of liquor in my face, and I knocked him down. Lavengro The Scholar, the Gypsy, the Priest
  • This individual can also be an extravagant boaster.
  • A boaster and a liar are all one. 
  • “As generally under - stood,” Aristotle said in the Ethics, “the boaster is a man who pretends to creditable qualities that he does not possess, or possesses in a lesser degree than he makes out, while conversely the self-depreciator dis - claims or disparages good qualities that he does possess. IRONY
  • He was an exquisitely talented painter and sculptor who worked for popes and kings, a contemporary and acquaintance of Michaelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci; an incorrigibly opinionated boaster, duelist and brawler, an occasional jailbreaker (for that fast mouth of his got him in trouble more than once), and an indefatigable self-promoter and traveling PR show, with an ego the size of the planet. OMG, how did I miss this?! | Diane Duane's weblog: "Out of Ambit"
  • He rather enjoyed it when things were good, but he'd just made himself a target for those people who weren't kindly inclined to boasters.
  • But of course, a boaster often had their just reasons for boasting.
  • Reflections on his vigour (a bounder), corporal proportion (a billsticker), commercial ability (a bester), impressionability (a boaster). Ulysses
  • My last story of boasters and foolish acts has just happened yesterday.

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