Ostentatiously fine; showy; gay, but tawdry or meretricious., Gay; merry; festal., One of the large beads in the rosary at which the paternoster is recited., A feast or festival; -- called also gaud-day and gaudy day.
Synonyms for gaudy: garish showy flashy ostentatious
The official definition for the word gaudy is "extravagantly bright or showy, typically so as to be tasteless."
vulgar, gaudy, tasteless, cheap, showy, ornate
example art in luzon with meaning
Well to me a winged heart with a halo obove them is my personal symbol for Faith, Hope and Love. The halo meaning Faith, wings meaning Hope and the heart meaning Love.
A sentence using the word gaudy could be: The girl looked out of place at the wedding in her gaudy clothes. Gaudy means excessively bright and showy, with a negative connotation, meaning that it is out of place or tasteless.
tasteless
ere is a Latin word 'gaudium, meaning joy or delight
The word "gaudy" can be traced back to the Latin word "gaudere," meaning "to rejoice." It entered the English language in the 16th century.
there is some difference of opinion but likely gaudy originates from latin gaudere meaning to rejoice & came via Anglo french gaudir meaning to be merry to produce gaud in middle English meaning a deception or trick or an ornamental bead or rosary which then led to gaudy by 1529
The word (gaudy) is from Latin gaudium (hence the spelling) meaning 'joy'
Her car was as gaudy as the sun.
Georges Gaudy was born in 1872.
Gaudy Night was created in 1935.
Georges Gaudy died in 1940.
cheap and gaudy in appearance or quality
Synonyms for gaudy: garish showy flashy ostentatious