What is another word for pompously?

Pronunciation: [pˈɒmpəsli] (IPA)

Pompously is an adverb that means to behave in an overly self-important way. The word is often used to describe someone who talks or acts in an exaggerated manner. There are many synonyms for the word; some of the most common ones are grandiosely, haughtily, arrogantly, pretentiously, ostentatiously, lofty, self-important, bombastically, and high-handedly. Each of these words conveys a sense of self-importance and arrogance, but may have slightly different contexts in which they are most commonly used. Whether being used to describe a person, a speech, or an action, these synonyms for pompously can be used to give a more nuanced description of someone's behavior.

What are the opposite words for pompously?

The word "pompously" refers to someone who behaves in an arrogant or showy manner. Some antonyms or opposite words for "pompously" are modestly, humbly, meekly, simply, unassumingly, and unpretentiously. By contrast, these words describe individuals who are down-to-earth, unassuming, and do not seek to draw attention to themselves through grandiose displays or presentations. Individuals who act modestly are often considered more attractive than those who act pompously, as they are seen as more sincere and authentic. It is important to cultivate humility and avoid behaving pompously if one desires to build healthy and long-lasting relationships with others.

What are the antonyms for Pompously?

Usage examples for Pompously

He was quoting himself really, because he had once used that phrase in a pompously effective manner.
"The Devil's Garden"
W. B. Maxwell
The florid gentleman, mopping his forehead with a Cambridge-blue silk handkerchief, replied rather pompously, if thickly: "I'm Julius Rohscheimer.
"The Sins of Séverac Bablon"
Sax Rohmer
Mallowe entered pompously and then paused, glancing rather uncertainly from the detective to Morrow.
"The Crevice"
William John Burns and Isabel Ostrander

Famous quotes with Pompously

  • A person who shows the honest respect for hard workers is more nationalist than one who displays pompously own country flag on self body or dress part.
    Anuj Somany
  • Hard work does work magic but hardly as how most of the common men think and probably never the way as how most affluent people pompously say to others.
    Anuj Somany
  • Most people punish often the mentally bright & praise selfishly the immoral person placed monetarily on a topmost height; and then pompously say that they are all right but the world is not.
    Anuj Somany
  • Faults of the mind increase with old age as do those of the features. An old man is incapable of taking up new ideas because he lacks the power to assimilate them, so he clings with crabbed tenacity to the opinions of his maturity. He pompously believes himself able to deal with any problem. Contradiction infuriates him, and he regards it as lack of respect. "In my days," he says, "we never contradicted our elders." He forgets that in his day these same words were spoken to him by his grandfather. Unable to interest himself in what is happening round him and thereby keep himself up to date, he tells stories of his past over and over again; and these are so boring to his younger listeners that they end by avoiding him altogether. Solitude is the greatest evil of old age; one by one lifelong friends and relative disappear, and they cannot be replaced. The desert widens, and death would be pleasant if its rapid approach were not so curiously threatening.
    André Maurois

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