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heroics

[ US /hɪˈɹoʊɪks/ ]
[ UK /hɪɹˈə‍ʊɪks/ ]
NOUN
  1. ostentatious or vainglorious or extravagant or melodramatic conduct
    heroics are for those epic films they make in Hollywood

How To Use heroics In A Sentence

  • Thus, we get both the boiling guitar heroics and songs that bristle to the point of bluntness.
  • Maybe we can keep my TV heroics from escalating into killing, which otherwise I'm afraid they might. STONE CITY
  • Directors have shied away from making gory movies of this genre assuming that audiences find heroics in historical garb unexciting.
  • They recall the heroics of the Ukrainians with one important difference. The Mexican People: Heroes of Democracy
  • This is romance without the gauzy focus and war without the heroics. Christianity Today
  • But it came down to last-second heroics and breathless moments provided by the rarest of talents.
  • Quick with a quip and so square jawed that he actually dreams about his supersonic flying automobile, his heroics help keep the Supercar staff safe and sound.
  • Pints were raised, toasts made and car horns worn out as Ireland celebrated this famous victory, this piece of sporting history that will rank alongside the heroics of both 1990 and 1994 in the football annals.
  • Their makeshift pack performed heroics, and the backs found the spirit of adventure whose absence was so often criticised Down Under.
  • Miguel Tejada, despite his heroics, is at just .087. USATODAY.com - By any measure, Bonds on top
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