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Extravagant - 5 dictionary results

ex⋅trav⋅a⋅gant

[ik-strav-uh-guhnt]
–adjective
1. spending much more than is necessary or wise; wasteful: an extravagant shopper.
2. excessively high: extravagant expenses; extravagant prices.
3. exceeding the bounds of reason, as actions, demands, opinions, or passions.
4. going beyond what is deserved or justifiable: extravagant praise.
5. Obsolete. wandering beyond bounds.

Origin:
1350–1400; ME < ML extrāvagant- (s. of extrāvagāns), prp. of extrāvagārī, equiv. to extrā- extra- + vagārī to wander


ex⋅trav⋅a⋅gant⋅ly, adverb
ex⋅trav⋅a⋅gant⋅ness, noun


1. imprudent, spendthrift, prodigal. 2. immoderate, excessive, inordinate. 3. unreasonable, unrestrained, fantastic, wild, absurd, preposterous.


1. prudent, thrifty. 2. moderate. 3. reasonable.
ex·trav·a·gant   (ĭk-strāv'ə-gənt)   
adj.  
  1. Given to lavish or imprudent expenditure: extravagant members of the imperial court.
  2. Exceeding reasonable bounds: extravagant demands. See Synonyms at excessive.
  3. Extremely abundant; profuse: extravagant vegetation.
  4. Unreasonably high; exorbitant: extravagant fees.
  5. Archaic Straying beyond limits or bounds; wandering.

[Middle English, unusual, rambling, from Old French, from Medieval Latin extrāvagāns, extrāvagant-, present participle of extrāvagārī, to wander : Latin extrā, outside; see extra- + Latin vagārī, to wander.]
ex·trav'a·gant·ly adv.

Extravagant

Ex*trav"a*gant\, a. [F. extravagant, fr. L. extra on the outside + vagans, -antis, p. pr. of vagari to wander, from vagus wandering, vague. See Vague.]

1. Wandering beyond one's bounds; roving; hence, foreign. [Obs.]

The extravagant and erring spirit hies To his confine. --Shak.

2. Exceeding due bounds; wild; excessive; unrestrained; as, extravagant acts, wishes, praise, abuse.

There appears something nobly wild and extravagant in great natural geniuses. --Addison.

3. Profuse in expenditure; prodigal; wasteful; as, an extravagant man. "Extravagant expense." --Bancroft.

Extravagant

Ex*trav"a*gant\, n. 1. One who is confined to no general rule. --L'Estrange.

2. pl. (Eccl. Hist.) Certain constitutions or decretal epistles, not at first included with others, but subsequently made a part of the canon law.
Language Translation for : Extravagant
Spanish: derrochador, despilfarrador,
German: verschwenderisch,
Japanese: 浪費的な

extravagant 
1387, from M.L. extravagantem, originally a word in Canon Law for uncodified papal decrees, prp. of extravagari "wander outside or beyond," from L. extra "outside of" + vagari "wander, roam." Extended sense of "excessive, extreme" first recorded 1599; that of "wasteful, lavish" 1711. Extravaganza is a 1754 borrowing of the It. version of the word, meaning "peculiar behavior" at first; sense of "fantastic performance" is 1794.
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