- dictionary.reverso.net english-cobuild/extravagantextravagant. 1 excessive, having money to burn, improvident, imprudent, lavish, prodigal, profligate, spendthrift, wasteful.
- oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com definition/english…She's got very extravagant tastes. extravagant with something Residents were warned not to be extravagant with water, in view of the low rainfall this year.
- Someone has been very extravagant with paper. 2) extreme, unusual, or unreasonable. He made extravagant claims on his son's behalf.
- urbandictionary.com define.php…person 1: what person 2: you good ? person 1: what nigga ? i’m like , extravagant. ... Some people have extravagant personalities.
- wikiwordy.com word/extravagantExtravagant, Profuse, Lavish, Wasteful, Prodigal, reckless. Extravagant and prodigal refer more often to habits or character, the others to acts.
- thecontentauthority.com Extravagant vs Modest: Meaning And DifferencesWhen it comes to describing something, there are often two words that come to mind: extravagant and modest. But which one is the proper word to use?
- etymonline.com word/extravagant1640s, "an extravagant act," from French extravagance, from Late Latin extravagantem (see extravagant). Specifically of wasteful spending from 1727.
- wordtools.ai definition/extravagantThe bride wore an extravagant wedding gown with intricate lace and beading. The CEO lives in an extravagant mansion with a private pool and tennis court.
- en.wiktionary.org wiki/extravagantThe half-dozen pieces […] were painted white and carved with festoons of flowers, birds and cupids. […] The bed was the most extravagant piece.
- tr.bab.la sozluk/ingilizce-turkce/extravagantHere's wildness and art, in right proportion: the wildness is surprise without swagger; the art is graceful and mostly disappearing, and otherwise a little extravagant.