football
Giants’ Dexter Lawrence replacement strategy takes form
football
Why Jets made NFL draft move for Cade Klubnik
football
The easy way Giants can prove Joe Schoen is safe
football
Steve Tisch, Giants have no shame
football
Dexter Lawrence was really done with the Giants
football
Giants’ Dexter Lawrence demands trade
football
NFL washes its hands of Giants’ Steve Tisch, but questions remain
football
What exactly are the Jets trying to do here?
football
Are Giants actually entertaining Odell Beckham Jr. return?
football
Giants’ Cam Skattebo apologizes for podcast comments
football
Mike Francesa has some hot Jets scoop
football
Steve Tisch is divesting his Giants ownership, ESPN says
football
NFL free agency: Giants snag Isaiah Likely, Jordan Stout
football
Giants’ Steve Tisch problem isn’t going away like they want
football
Giants’ No. 1 offseason crisis gets even worse
football
Giants are ‘not happy’ with Joe Schoen discourse
football
Giants are already abandoning Joe Schoen charade
football
Let’s stop pretending Giants are ‘classy’ organization
football
Giants say former coach Ray Handley has died
football
Super Bowl BetMGM Bonus Code ELITE1500: Get $1,500 Bonus for Patriots-Seahawks
beauty
book
exercise
food
game
golf
health
lifestyle
mental
metro
people
politics
science
shopping
sports

Word of the Day

flamboyant

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 6, 2026 is:

flamboyant • \flam-BOY-ant\  • adjective

Someone or something described as flamboyant has a very noticeable quality that attracts a lot of attention. Such a person or thing is often strikingly elaborate or colorful in their behavior or display.

// Reality television attracts millions of viewers for its depictions of flamboyant, larger-than-life personalities living equally flamboyant lifestyles.

See the entry >

Examples:

“[Helen] McCrory’s flamboyant and perfectly drawn portrayal of Polly was the show’s real treasure, a steel-willed matriarch unusually attuned to the mysticism of the Shelby family’s Romani roots who also served as a ruthlessly pragmatic consigliere. ... McCrory’s Polly was so electric that the show remained totally riveting any time she was onscreen.” — Jack Hamilton, Slate, 20 Mar. 2026

Did you know?

Associate the word flamboyant with bananas flambé and the word’s fiery etymology will be seared in your mind. Flamboyant, which was borrowed into English from French in the 19th century, can be traced back to the Old French word flambe, meaning “flame.” In its earliest uses flamboyant referred to an ornate style of Gothic architecture popular in France and Spain, which featured waving curves suggestive of flames. Eventually, the word developed a more general second sense for anything eye-catching or showy. And of course, flambe is also the origin of the English adjective flambé, which describes food flamboyantly dressed or served with flaming liquor.