Flourish /(?)/

Flour·ish

Flourish

v. i.

imp. & p. p. Flourished; p. pr. & vb. n. Flourishing

  1. To grow luxuriantly; to increase and enlarge, as a healthy growing plant; a thrive.
    A tree thrives and flourishes in a kindly . . . soil.
    — Bp. Horne.
  2. To be prosperous; to increase in wealth, honor, comfort, happiness, or whatever is desirable; to thrive; to be prominent and influental; specifically, of authors, painters, etc., to be in a state of activity or production.
    When all the workers of iniquity do flourish.
    — Ps. xcii 7
    Bad men as frequently prosper and flourish, and that by the means of their wickedness.
    — Nelson.
    We say Of those that held their heads above the crowd, They flourished then or then.
  3. To use florid language; to indulge in rhetorical figures and lofty expressions; to be flowery.
    They dilate . . . and flourish long on little incidents.
    — J. Watts.
  4. To make bold and sweeping, fanciful, or wanton movements, by way of ornament, parade, bravado, etc.; to play with fantastic and irregular motion.
    Impetuous spread The stream, and smoking flourished o'er his head.
  5. To make ornamental strokes with the pen; to write graceful, decorative figures.
  6. To execute an irregular or fanciful strain of music, by way of ornament or prelude.
    Why do the emperor's trumpets flourish thus?
  7. To boast; to vaunt; to brag.

Flourish

v. t.
  1. To adorn with flowers orbeautiful figures, either natural or artificial; to ornament with anything showy; to embellish. [Obs.]
  2. To embellish with the flowers of diction; to adorn with rhetorical figures; to grace with ostentatious eloquence; to set off with a parade of words. [Obs.]
    Sith that the justice of your title to him Doth flourish the deceit.
  3. To move in bold or irregular figures; to swing about in circles or vibrations by way of show or triumph; to brandish.
    And flourishes his blade in spite of me.
  4. To develop; to make thrive; to expand. [Obs.]
    Bottoms of thread . . . which with a good needle, perhaps may be flourished into large works.

Flourish

n.

pl. Flourishes

  1. A flourishing condition; prosperity; vigor. [Archaic]
    The Roman monarchy, in her highest flourish, never had the like.
  2. Decoration; ornament; beauty.
    The flourish of his sober youth Was the pride of naked truth.
    — Crashaw.
  3. Something made or performed in a fanciful, wanton, or vaunting manner, by way of ostentation, to excite admiration, etc.; ostentatious embellishment; ambitious copiousness or amplification; parade of words and figures; show; as, a flourish of rhetoric or of wit.
    He lards with flourishes his long harangue.
  4. A fanciful stroke of the pen or graver; a merely decorative figure.
    The neat characters and flourishes of a Bible curiously printed.
  5. A fantastic or decorative musical passage; a strain of triumph or bravado, not forming part of a regular musical composition; a cal; a fanfare.
    A flourish, trumpets! strike alarum, drums!
  6. The waving of a weapon or other thing; a brandishing; as, the flourish of a sword.