thrasonical
Jan. 18th, 2017 07:46 amthrasonical (thray-SON-i-kuhl) - adj., boastful, vainglorious.
More literally, of, pertaining to, or resembling ThrasÅ(n), a braggart soldier in Terence's play Eunuchus (161 BC) -- who was in turn named from Greek thrasos, bold/spirited. Borrowed in 1564 and used, among other people, by Shakespeare in Love's Labors Lost.
More literally, of, pertaining to, or resembling ThrasÅ(n), a braggart soldier in Terence's play Eunuchus (161 BC) -- who was in turn named from Greek thrasos, bold/spirited. Borrowed in 1564 and used, among other people, by Shakespeare in Love's Labors Lost.