Boast, brag, crow, display, flaunt, gasconade,prate, strut
vaunt means to boast, to brag about
The kind loved to vaunt his supposed proficiency with a sword.
Vaunt is to flaunt as disparate is to be discouraged or to surrender or to lie low.
Vaunt is to flaunt as disparate is to be discouraged or to surrender or to lie low.
valet, vomit, vault, vaunt
Different or dissimilar
be proud, boast, brag, congratulate, crow, exult,felicitate, flatter oneself, gasconade, glory in,hold head high, overbear, pique*, prance, preen,presume, puff up, revel in, strut*, swagger,swell*, vaunt
brag, crow, vaunt, talk big, blow your own trumpet, show off
Neither is correct. First, to write "you're" ('you are') when you mean "your" ('belonging to you') is always wrong. Second, neither 'vaunt about' nor 'vaunt over' reads well to modern ears; to use the verb intransitively in that way is an archaic usage. And even when used transitively it is very uncommon these days. The only usage that is at all colloquial is the adjective 'much-vaunted'. You would do much better to write 'you'll boast about your achievement.'
laminate
It's figurative language, specifically a simile.
I believe there are no English words that meet the criteria. Here are your options: blunt, brunt, count, daunt, fount, gaunt, grunt, haunt, jaunt, mount, shunt, stunt, taunt, vaunt