1. to show off
She only bought that sports car to show off and prove she could afford one.
2. endorse
I can endorse that.
Endorse this check.
The idea was endorsed by a majority of members.
A major celebrity endorses our new products.
The president endorsed this candidate
they endorse common and individual responsibility for bringing about sustainable development
I expect the boss to endorse these recommendations.
if a celebrity endorses a product they say how good it is in advertisements
I cannot accept this cheque - it's not endorsed.
I encourage all fellow Members to endorse this report.
I fully endorse everything the chairperson has said.
she has been endorsed by mayor
The prime minister is expected to endorse the bill. He endorsed the new project.
Members of all parties endorsed a ban on the broadcast of tobacco advertisements.
I can only endorse what the previous speaker said.
3. sign it
4. sign
Just sign here.
Do not sign a delivery receipt unless it accurately lists the goods received.
Even at the end of the nineteenth century, sailors in the British Navy were not permitted to use knives and forks because using them was considered a sign of weakness.
To get technical information from that company, we first have to sign a non-disclosure agreement.
The most perfect ape cannot draw an ape; only man can do that; but, likewise, only man regards the ability to do this as a sign of superiority.
Thunder has been explained scientifically, and people no longer believe it is a sign that the gods are angry with them, so thunder, too, is a little less frightening.
He turned to his orange juice sullenly, sneering that every little additive would sign him up for experiments he wanted no part in.
I don't understand why they moved the soft sign in the Ukrainian alphabet; it seemed much more logical for me when it came at the end.
A stop sign in Japan has 3 sides, whereas a stop sign in the U.S. has 8 sides.
The sign for siblings in Japanese sign language could well be misunderstood by many Americans with disastrous consequences.
After countless burials of the hatchet, we always dig it up again. There doesn't seem to be any sign of an ever-lasting peace.
A sign is a clue something happened, or a display that communicates a message, like a stop sign that tells you stop. To sign also means to write your signature.
If you sign up to Facebook, your information will be sent to intelligence agencies.
I'd like to set up a sign like, "This Way ->," but what would it be if I made it in English?
5. flaunt
to flaunt one's superiority
The rich flaunted their wealth while the poor starved on the streets.
She liked to flaunt her wealth by wearing furs and jewelry. They openly flaunted the rules.
They drove around in Rolls-Royces, openly flaunting their wealth 2. One secret he learned very early on was not to flaunt his success.
to flaunt the strength of the country he rules
He's got a lot of money but he doesn't flaunt it.
newly rich consumers eager to flaunt their prosperity
Their arms and chests bulge with artificial strength, and they flaunt their muscle like girls showing off new toys.
To display his feces openly, to flaunt the smell of them, would have been a sign of social dominance.
Lawrence didn't flaunt his wealth.
Angličtina slovo „podpisywać się„(flaunt) se zobrazí v sadách:
pora na nauke