swashbuckling

IPA: swˈɑʃbʌkɫɪŋ

adjective

  • Adventurous, exciting.
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Examples of "swashbuckling" in Sentences

  • I have a swashbuckling romantic tripe problem.
  • The accident cut his swashbuckling career short.
  • And, besides, his swashbuckling was a fine thing to see.
  • With the right script, he might be able to capture that kind of swashbuckling magic again.
  • Put it this way: After you read this book, you get to use the word "swashbuckling" to describe it.
  • He was a tall, handsome, kind of swashbuckling, enchanting man, and he definitely held sway over the boy.
  • Latendresse is given the adjective of 'swashbuckling' … what in the heck does that mean for a hockey player?
  • Mrs. Smith, might very well be calling the swashbuckling shots when the cameras start rolling, a date that Warner Bros. is eyeing as "as soon as possible".
  • Instead, I pirated books (lawyers and other official-type people take note, by “pirate” I mean I dress up in swashbuckling garb while I read free public-domain titles).
  • From his shoot out with the cops at the Little Bohemia Lodge, to his daring escape from jail using a wooden gun covered with boot polish, the film allows us to indulge in the idea of Dillinger as a kind of swashbuckling hatchet man.
  • Inspired by a few facts from Errol Flynn's life, and rooting her story firmly in Jamaican history, Cezair-Thompson vividly imagines the life of Ida, who is little more than a child herself when she gives birth to her daughter May, the illegitimate child of 1930/40s movie star Errol Flynn - known as a swashbuckling adventurer on screen, and for his glittering parties and affairs off screen.

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synonyms for swashbuckling
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