He had a flair for pyrotechnics, so people could not wait to see the flare in his show.
While he had a flair for sailing, in case of an emergency, he kept a flare gun aboard the boat.
She's a confident model who dresses with amazing style and flair and her hair shone like a flare.
I'm not surprised that he won the art contest because he has always had a flair for drawing and the flare he drew was beautifully done.
the police man found a flare in the house and also in a car
You might think a flare would not burn in a vacuum, however, they will. The oxygen for the flare to burn is already chemically in the flare. And flare guns HAVE gone into space- as emergency equipment.
Flare
no because a solar flare cant actually hit the earth the earths magnetosphere protects it there for the flare will not hurt you physically
Example sentence - The pilot of a balloon is called an aeronaut.
(A sentence with the word, flair...) My friend was wearing a pretty skirt that had a lot of flair in it :) Does that help at all? I think the sentence about needs the word flare, not flair. How about - He has a flair for understanding abstract mathematical concepts.
The bright flare in the night sky signified the start of the fireworks show.
flair
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning. In the case of "flair" and "flare," they are homophones because they are pronounced the same, but "flair" refers to a stylish skill or talent, while "flare" refers to a sudden burst of light or flame.
The homonym for "flare" is "flair". "Flair" refers to a special or innate talent or ability, while "flare" refers to a sudden burst of light or flame.
The other spelling of flare is flair.
Your question lacks flair.
I will shoot the flare gun.
flair, flare
By the application of an immense amount of effort, flair, and experience when composing a sentence.
(noun) The politician had a flair for overly dramatic pronouncements.(noun) The student showed a flair for geometry and math.(noun) She always dressed with an elegant flair.(*not to be confused with "flare", a light signal, outward shape, or aircraft maneuver)
flair, flare