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- Dictionaryflout/flaʊt/
verb
- 1. openly disregard (a rule, law, or convention): "the advertising code is being flouted"
- 2. mock; scoff: archaic "the women pointed and flouted at her"
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to intentionally disobey a rule or law, or to intentionally avoid behavior that is usual or expected: They think they can flout the law and get away with it. He conducted business in his pajamas to flout convention. (Definition of flout from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
The meaning of FLOUT is to treat with contemptuous disregard : scorn. How to use flout in a sentence. Did you know? Flaunt vs. Flout: Usage Guide Synonym Discussion of Flout.
If you flout something such as a law, an order, or an accepted way of behaving, you deliberately do not obey it or follow it.
to intentionally disobey a rule or law, or to intentionally avoid behavior that is usual or expected: They think they can flout the law and get away with it. He conducted business in his pajamas to flout convention. (Definition of flout from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
flout something to show that you have no respect for a law, etc. by openly not obeying it synonym defy. Motorists regularly flout the law. to flout authority/convention; She likes flouting convention and doing her own thing.
1. To ignore or disregard (a rule or convention, for example) in an open or defiant way: flout a law; behavior that flouted convention. See Usage Note at flaunt. 2. Archaic To express contempt for; mock or jeer at. [Perhaps from Middle English flouten, to play the flute, from Old French flauter, from flaute, flute; see flute.] flout′er n.
FLOUT definition: to intentionally not obey or accept something: . Learn more.