A gaudy and proud outward display.
(Music) a short lively tune played on brass instruments.
1 New Zealand signed the Convention in March last year, to great fanfare .
2 A year ago this month, Netflix launched in India with much fanfare .
3 Last week, the company announced, to great fanfare , something called Google Wave.
4 Apple brought Landi to Cupertino from Europe in June with much fanfare .
5 Here is the first time the fanfare was played: Good stuff, right?
6 Other nations may also have continued to test such weapons without fanfare .
7 The anniversary will be marked this year with much fanfare and chest-thumping.
8 All of those online companies went public in 2011 with much fanfare .
9 It has received much fanfare for being the best at many things.
10 Officials maintain that protective measures are being taken, but with little fanfare .
11 I Wish was released without fanfare in the midst of Oscar season.
12 This presidential election cycle has had historic levels of fanfare and spectacle.
13 No big public announcement, no fanfare was the order of the day.
14 It seems Aer Lingus hitting the tarmac is causing quite the fanfare .
15 These ideas disappear quietly, like the Sky God, with no great fanfare .
16 And they have done all this with absolutely zero fanfare or uproar.
Другие примеры для термина "fanfare"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Fanfare в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки