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"flounce" Definitions
  1. a piece of cloth that is sewn around the edge of a skirt, dress, curtain, etc.
  2. [usually singular] (disapproving) a quick and exaggerated movement that you make when you are angry or want people to notice you

60 Sentences With "flounce"

How to use flounce in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "flounce" and check conjugation/comparative form for "flounce". Mastering all the usages of "flounce" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Among CDUers, CSUers and Greens the FDP's flounce met with shock and vituperation.
Hermit crabs and octopuses flounce on furniture, burdened by all too human anxieties.
They may criticize Trump out loud or, like Jeff Flake, resign with a flounce.
Here is every time the U.S. or North Korea has threatened to flounce out.
The Flounce SkirtOur denim now has a kick to it, and so should our skirts.
Her dresses had little fluff or flounce and were often strapless with sheer illusion necklines.
In the jersey materials, such as the Chanel costumes for street wear were made of last season, new touches are to be seen in the fine box-plaited flounced skirt, with the same plaited flounce on the coat falling over the skirt flounce. Mlle.
Across the Channel, Eurosceptics such as the French National Front will see Britain's flounce-out as encouragement.
By Design Miles Redd has made a career out of his love for custom flounce and flourish.
Then, for a bit, the government threatened to flounce out of talks, until it wisely stopped doing that.
But how satisfying is making a living letting people watch you flounce around all day through your iPhone?
Eugenie "tends to like more fitted, 1960s shapes, where as Beatrice likes flounce and floral pieces," he said.
She gets to be outlandish, horrible, and gorgeous, then flounce off into the fields aglow with hippie self-righteousness.
Like the set designer James Noone's nimble use of the petite stage and Sarah Jean Tosetti's flounce-forward costumes.
But some diplomats voice concern that London may be tempted to flounce out without paying EU bills worth tens of billions.
Watch this from VICE: The study results challenged the idea that adult children flounce away from their families out of pique.
Warming to the philosophical cast of the discussion, the visitor brought up the waist-level flounce that adorns some women's clothing.
And now I'll flounce away, borrowing a line from the original Krystle: "If you want a rematch, just whistle … if you can!"
In 2013 she chose a red organza tweed flounce dress with a black yoke and accessorized with a jeweled Alexis Bittar flower brooch. 2014
Today, when the modestly competent negotiation by the EU of a big member's flounce-out counts as a success, that is in short supply.
In the modern era, it can mean a short skirt or full flounce attached to a bodice or jacket, and meant to cover the hips.
Out with the thick knits and flannel and in with the flounce tops and white denim, or so says H&M with its new spring arrivals.
Fully 48% of voters opposed Britain's flounce, but with Labour out of play and Theresa May's government careening towards a "hard Brexit", they have no voice.
Edie's daughter is left to flounce off, their relationship unresolved and the strain of extended obligation — a growing concern for many in an aging population — unexplored.
An out vote would reverse their incentives: the harsher the terms of Britain's flounce, the lower the odds of other countries following it out of the door.
Mariah Carey may not know who Ariana Grande is, but that doesn't mean the wee pop songstress can't flounce about on Snapchat with her fella, rapper Mac Miller.
Eugenie, who is set to wed fiancé Jack Brooksbank in October, "tends to like more fitted, 1960s shapes, where as Beatrice likes flounce and floral pieces,"  says Anderson.
Here, the full and dramatic flounce of the skirt is undercut by the bright orange top, but they don't look like disparate separates: They're a continuous and integrated whole.
And you don't even have to flounce hard — some pointed out that many food blogs offer a button that allows users to jump straight to the recipe, skipping the introduction.
In another room, a row of male executives elbows up to a tennis-court-size rink, where leggy female models in shorts and shoulder pads flounce around squealing, pretending to play football.
But the theme was taken to the next level by "Green Book" star Linda Cardellini whose oversized flounce of red ruffles cascaded in layers down her body, cinched together with a pink belt.
Unlike pretty much every such award outing in recent memory, there were no eye-rolling clothing bloopers as designers and stylists attempted to attract ever more eyeballs with ever more flounce and frippery.
Local Conservative associations are furious about the prime minister's support for EU membership (and thus sympathetic to Mr Duncan Smith's flounce) and there is dark muttering among MPs about a bid to oust Mr Cameron after the referendum.
Emma Stone, nominated for best actress in "La La Land" sparkled in a 1920s inspired gold fringed Givenchy gown, as "Hidden Figures" supporting actress contender Octavia Spencer opted for a silvery Marchesa adorned with a flounce of feathers.
In the coming European election campaign politicians will compete less on whether the EU is a good thing (Brexit has curbed others' appetite to flounce out) and more on how it can be used to shield the little guy from change.
And while the CDU/CSU and the Greens insist (credibly) that a deal with the FDP was possible and pooh-pooh the latter's claim to have "protected Germany from chaotic government", the flounce spoke of personality clashes and lacking trust between the parties after four weeks of talks.
That's as true of the one random skirt we added to our cart to dabble in the flounce-hem revival (and to meet that delivery minimum) as it is for celebrities in the ongoing trial-and-error realities of having red carpet after red carpet on the docket.
On Tuesday, the former pop star left her hotel in New York City wearing a $1,850 navy and red striped flounce-collared button-down shirt by Chloé with sheer, ruffled, three-quarter sleeves paired with a $250 Isabel Marant burgundy leather mini skirt with a coordinated ruffle running down the left-hand side.
Albeit the more interesting pieces were minidresses in taffeta that took that idea and blew it up, literally, into giant puff sleeves that circled round the back in an enormous flounce (more interesting than the floral dresses in a Japanese vase print and micro-pleated technical silk with curving little ruffles at the hem, cuffs and neck).
And though Karl Lagerfeld constructed a mirrored Art Deco salon complete with cream suede sofas and calla lilies for Chanel, transposing rooms at 31 Rue Cambon to the echoing environs of the Grand Palais, what was most notable was not the surround, but rather the way the silhouette had been altered by adding a plain leather belt, cinched just at the lower ribs, to everything from bouclé suiting to crystalline slips finished in a flounce of feathers.
As a 10-year-old, excited but terrified at the prospect of my own encroaching puberty, reading the passages in "Little Town on the Prairie" (1941) detailing, say, Mary Ingalls's going-away-to-college outfit, with its "gored skirt of brown cashmere," and "overskirt ... of brown-and-blue plaid" not to mention its confusingly named "flounced train" and "pleated flounce" (were those one and the same?) acted as a balm, a calming litany; covered-up fashion, it seemed, could protect you from the grenade that your body was slowly but surely becoming.
When he, his mother and Ravikanth enter Muthu's house, they find Devi, Roopa and Viswanathan already there. Devi and Roopa take a bag each from Muthu then flounce off in opposite directions.
Mid-calf length, button-front denim prairie skirts with a single flounce, worn with a 1950s-style petticoat that was slightly longer than the skirt, became a mainstream fashion in the 1970s and early 1980s following Lauren's introduction.
Caulfield and Saward, The Dictionary of Needlework, p. 218 A wavy effect is achieved without gathers or pleats by cutting a curved strip of fabric and applying the inner or shorter edge to the garment. The depth of the curve as well as the width of the fabric determines the depth of the flounce. A godet is a circle wedge that can be inserted into a flounce to further deepen the outer floating wave without adding additional bulk at the point of attachment to the body of the garment, such as at the hemline, collar or sleeve.
Carmen Ghia is Roger De Bris' "common-law assistant".William A. Everett and Paul R. Laird, The Cambridge Companion to the Musical (2008), 335. They are both flamboyantly gay and they love to flounce around their Upper East Side town house. Voutsinas was a friend of Brooks' wife Anne Bancroft, who performed with him at The Actors Studio.
Jacques Doucet, 1898-1900, with characteristics of the aesthetic dress movement : simple in design, "yet extravagant by the choice of materials used. The sheer overlayer is enhanced by the solid lamé underlayers and a sense of luxury is added by the hidden lace flounce at the hem."Ball gown on Metropolitan Museum of Art. Oscar Wilde in his aesthetic lecturing costume, 1882.
Vogue Runway described many of the shapes as fashion-forward with flounce accents, higher necklines, and leg-of-mutton sleeves. There were also graphic elements, highlighted here with colored off-the-shoulder furs. The palette included orange, lavender, lime, hot pink, yellow, grey, and black. New proportions gave way to mini jackets, deep slits, and peplum dresses, while bare shoulders read as more feminine and seductive.
Orange flower blossoms, a symbol of fertility, also trimmed the dress and made up Victoria's wreath, which she wore instead of a tiara over her veil. The veil, which matched the flounce of the dress, was four yards in length and 0.75 yards wide. Her jewellery consisted of diamond earrings and necklace, and a sapphire brooch given to her by Albert. The slippers she wore matched the white colour of the dress.
Orange blossoms, a symbol of fertility, also trimmed the dress and made up a wreath, which Victoria wore instead of a tiara over her veil. The veil, which matched the flounce of the dress, was four yards in length and 0.75 yards wide. Victoria's jewelry consisted of a necklace and earrings made of diamonds presented to her by the Sultan of Turkey, and a sapphire cluster brooch given to her by Albert a day earlier. The slippers she wore matched the white color of the dress.
Princess di Sant' Antimo's evening gown of watered silk shows the short sleeves, lace flounce collar, and long pointed waist of the early 1840s. The tiny pleats that gather her skirt can be seen at the waistline. 1840–44. Shoulders were narrow and sloping, waists became low and pointed, and sleeve detail migrated from the elbow to the wrists. Where pleated fabric panels had wrapped the bust and shoulders in the previous decade, they now formed a triangle from the shoulder to the waist of day dresses.
Chicago Tribune 24 Oct 1988: 5. The Los Angeles Times said: "The vapidity of both [lead] performances is magnified by come-hither camera shots that linger too long on their empty faces... Down has a little more flounce to the ounce, but the best she can do as a woman deceived is to fly into a deep snit. Production values evoke the silky-bland noblesse oblige that has been canonized for TV by "Dynasty" and "Knots Landing"."Television Reviews Sans Ingrid and Cary, `Indiscreet' Is Inept: [Home Edition] Christon, Lawrence.
The cover for Smash Comics #22 was drafted by Brenner. One of the pseudonyms he used was "Wayne Reid". He also had a small part as a guest in the 1946 movie The Razor's Edge. The circumstances of his death are unknown, but Brenner is remembered as creator of the first (1936) masked hero in comics (other masked heroes like the Shadow and Zorro had previously appeared in pulps); the face covering worn by The Clock was nothing more than a simple black cloth with a flounce on the bottom.
The lace was designed by William Dyce, head of the then Government School of Design (later known as the Royal College of Art), and mounted on a white satin dress made by Mary Bettans. The plain, cream-colored satin gown was made from fabric woven in Spitalfields, east London, and trimmed with a deep flounce and trimmings of lace hand-made in Honiton and Beer, in Devon. This demonstrated support for English industry, particularly the cottage industry for lace. The handmade lace motifs were appliquéd onto cotton machine-made net.
The lace was designed by William Dyce, head of the then Government School of Design (later known as the Royal College of Art), and mounted on a white satin dress made by Mary Bettans. The plain, cream-coloured satin wedding dress was made from fabric woven in Spitalfields, east London, and trimmed with a deep flounce and trimmings of lace hand-made in Honiton and Beer, in Devon. This demonstrated support for English industry, particularly the cottage industry for lace. The handmade lace motifs were appliquéd onto cotton machine-made net.
Portrait of a woman wearing a heavily ruffled cap, 1789 In sewing and dressmaking, a ruffle, frill, or furbelow is a strip of fabric, lace or ribbon tightly gathered or pleated on one edge and applied to a garment, bedding, or other textile as a form of trimming.Caulfield, S.F.A. and B.C. Saward, The Dictionary of Needlework, 1885, facsimile edition, Blaketon Hall, 1989, p. 428 A flounce is a particular type of fabric manipulation that creates a similar look but with less bulk. The term derives from earlier terms of frounce or fronce.
Valenciennes flounce, 19th-century.The Marès Lace Museum () is located in a 17th-century building, the former Hospital de Sant Jaume, which was turned into a museum in 1983 to house the Frederic Marès lace collection. Currently it is a monographic museum, dedicated to lace making, which brings together different collections, such as those of Tórtola Valencia, Vives-Nadal and the Castells collection. One of the rooms in the Marès Lace Museum exhibits a representative sample from the old Fidel Fita Municipal Museum collection, which includes pieces of diverse origin from throughout the history of Arenys de Mar.
After Mansfield returned from her 40-day European tour, Hargitay proposed to her on November 6, 1957, with a $5,000 10-carat diamond ring ($ in dollars). On January 13, 1958 (days after her divorce from Paul was finalized), Mansfield married Hargitay at the Wayfarers Chapel in Rancho Palos Verdes, California. The unique glass chapel made public and press viewing of the wedding easy. Mansfield wore a sensational pink, skintight wedding gown made of sequins with a flounce of pink tulle (designed by a 20th Century-Fox costume designer), and at the reception she had Hargitay drink pink champagne.
This sparked the Puritan look of a white apron covering a long black dress that reached from a woman's neck to her toes. At the height of the industrial revolution in Victorian England, the market was flooded with different types of aprons. The boom of factories and sewing machines meant that consumers had options: one could choose a full-body apron, a linen apron, a linen apron with ruffles or ruching or lace, a grosgrain apron with embroidery, or an apron with a flounce. Aprons were a way of indicating the difference in status between the employer and the employee, and the uniform of the staff was strictly regulated.
In the autumn of 2006, The Times' style director Tina Gaudoin observed that "when the women's wear buyer at M[arks] & S[pencer] is quoted saying 'boho is over', you know the trend is well and truly six foot under."Times Magazine, 23 September 2006 Even so, the so-called "folk" look of spring 2007, with its smock tops and flounce hemmed dresses, owed much to boho-chic, while embracing such trends as the re-emergence of the mini-dress: as the Sunday Times put it, "if you are still bemoaning the passing of the gypsy look, then the folk trend could be your saving grace".Sunday Times Style, 18 March 2007 The Sunday Times cited the 1960s singer Mary Hopkin as influencing the use of bandannas, while, around the same time, Sienna Miller's appearance as 1960s "starlet" Edie Sedgwick in the film Factory Girl positioned her once more as a bohemian style icon. London Lite observed in May 2007 that: > You may baulk at the very word, but this summer's style has definite nuances > of boho – albeit in a very diluted form.
Lotta Annukka Wennäkoski (born Helsinki, 8 February 1970) is a Finnish composer. Wennäkoski studied the violin at the Béla Bartók Secondary Grammar and Technical School of Music in Budapest, Hungary between 1989–1990 and music theory and composition at the Sibelius Academy between 1994–2000 under Eero Hämeenniemi, Kaija Saariaho and Paavo Heininen and in the Royal Conservatory of The Hague between 1998–1999 under Louis Andriessen. Wennäkoski began her career as a composer by composing for radio plays and short films. A major landmark on her career was a concert at the Musica Nova Helsinki festival in 1999. Her notable works include Sakara for orchestra (2003), commissioned by Esa-Pekka Salonen, the string quartet Culla d’aria (2004), commissioned by the Kuhmo Chamber Music Festival, Hava for chamber orchestra, the flute concerto Soie (2009), one of the recommended works at the UNESCO International Rostrum of Composers in 2012, Verdigris for chamber orchestra (2015), commissioned by The Scottish Chamber Orchestra, and Flounce for orchestra, commissioned by the BBC and performed at the Last Night of the Proms in 2017.

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