

2020 Their bodies firm up and swagger into a ritualistic circle of savagery. 2021 Bo Nix had every reason to swagger into his freshman season at Auburn. Scott Ostler, San Francisco Chronicle, 19 Aug.
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2022 One team is going to swagger out of the three-game Bay Bridge Series in Oakland, and the other team is going to stagger out of it. 2022 No politician in history, though, has managed to swagger through an entire term in office.Įric Lach, The New Yorker, 8 Jan. 2022 One shot after another, one opportunity after another exploited, the Bears looked like the team most expected to swagger through Dickies Arena and advance. Recent Examples on the Web: Verb The seventh-seeded Knights earned some right to swagger into this game with a 69-52 victory over Florida on Saturday, the program’s first win over the Gators after 26 losses.ĭom Amore,, 20 Mar. He has a swagger that annoys some of his teammates. Matthew Klam, Harper's, February 1999 What a hero Tom was become, now! He did not go skipping and prancing, but moved with a dignified swagger as became a pirate who felt that the public eye was on him. Matt Diehl, Spin, September 2008 He greeted me with the swagger he's learned since he became a fighter pilot, smiling, his blue eyes glowing. Hoping to impress the women at the bar, the young man confidently swaggered across the room Noun He limps with a noticeable swagger, flamboyantly waving his cane, semi-ironically mimicking the rap stars who are now his peers. I, too, would swagger if I'd won first place in the bowling tournament. He looked with awe at the students of the corps, their cheeks gashed and red, who swaggered about in their coloured caps.

Cynthia Ozick, Harper's, April 2007 Sometimes he sauntered through the streets of the old town. 2009 So it is a fight rather than an argument, really-a fight over complexity versus ease, a fight that mostly mimics gang war, which is not so much a vigorous instance of manly bloodletting (though it is that too) as a dustup over prestige: who has the prior right to swagger in public. Carl Hiaasen, New York Times Book Review, 22 Feb. Verb He copped a plea, ratted out a dozen no-neck pals and swaggered off to prison, leaving South Beach temporarily without a pied piper.
