Arrogante in english

Arrogant

pronunciation: erəgənt part of speech: adjective
In gestures

arrogante1 = snob ; poseur ; big head. 

Example: The biggest faux pas according to snobs who take such things seriously is calling a sofa a couch or a setee.Example: This is an interesting little town wholly populated by poseurs and backpackers with a few salty sea dogs thrown in for good measure.Example: You've got such a big head that you could never live with yourself unless you could put us all to shame.

arrogante2 = arrogant ; cocky ; snobbish ; snobby ; haughty ; cocksure ; overbearing ; supercilious ; uppity ; self-opinionated ; proud ; boastful ; uppish ; condescending ; patronising [patronizing, -USA] ; overweening ; vain . 

Example: Particularly in libraries, the attitude of the employee is to become arrogant toward the user.Example: Bold, ambitious and in-your-face I've always considered them to be just too cocky by half.Example: It was possible to identify 3 main groups who display 3 different types of attitude -- participative, delegative and 'snobbish'.Example: Every one looked like death warmed up, including the snobby staff who I found far from welcoming.Example: The only blot on his escutcheon is, that after his great success he grew to be haughty and insolent in his demands.Example: The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.Example: Overbearing parents are likely to raise obsessive kids, according to a new study.Example: A commenter took me to task for being supercilious and said it was inconsistent with my religion.Example: He'd been popular earlier on but was now on thin ice with most members of our class due to his pretension and uppity manner.Example: Garfield shows no basis for his immodesty and self-opinionated progress through life.Example: The proud mother, as a result, had been a leader in the fight to establish a program for the 'gifted and talented' in the public school system.Example: The main character displays a boastful attitude that smacks of hubris in the extreme.Example: He had always delighted in ridiculing me by his uppish disobedience, especially in public places.Example: Now, he's a sore loser and talks to all of us in a threatening, condescending manner = Now, he's a sore loser and talks to all of us in a threatening, condescending manner.Example: There has been no change in all the years since, except that librarians have become more understanding and less patronising.Example: Their argument is that the federal government is so fouled up, so overweening, so entrenched, that it can only be restrained through a state-led endeavor to amend the Constitution.Example: The common idea that success spoils people by making them vain, egotistic and self-complacent is erroneous.

more:

» persona importante y arrogantehigh muck-a-muckmuck-a-muck .

Example: Sometimes this procedure is used to find a scapegoat or underling to take the fall for high muck-a-mucks.

Example: This bistro not only serves a fabulous breakfast for a steal, but provides a quiet, elegant space for muck-a-mucks to powwow.

» todo arrogantefull of conceit .

Example: I arrived at the airdrome full of conceit, thinking I was a real pilot.

Arrogante synonyms

proud in spanish: orgulloso, pronunciation: praʊd part of speech: adjective chesty in spanish: enfermizo de pecho, pronunciation: tʃesti part of speech: adjective self-important in spanish: auto-importante, pronunciation: selfɪmpɔrtənt part of speech: adjective
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