panache
panache, flair
noun pa-NASH Rare
Origin: from Italian pennacchio (plume), from penna (feather)
Also means
plume (of feathers or smoke)
Usage Note
Panache originally meant a plume of feathers on a helmet; its meaning of dashing style and flamboyant confidence is so associated with French culture that the English language borrowed it directly. The phrase avec panache means doing something with style and bravado. Cyrano de Bergerac's dying word panache in Rostand's play became a defining emblem of this quality.
Examples
"Elle a affronté la critique avec beaucoup de panache."
Natural Translation
She faced the criticism with great panache.
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