You can say something adds flair. 'Flair' means to spice up something, like a dish or something, so you can say 'This spice adds some flair to the sauce.'
Your question lacks flair.
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)
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
How do you use the word decibel in a sentence?What is decibel used for?
Your question lacks flair.
She was selected for the job because she had a certain flair.
(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.
By the application of an immense amount of effort, flair, and experience when composing a sentence.
I would use "panache".
(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 can be used for anything showing passion or enthusiasm. Eg: Her essay was full of flair and wit. Flair and temper are certain aspects of her personalty. She plays hockey with flair It can be a good and a bad thing but can only be used to say what something of someone was or is like not that they are actually flair.
A homophone for the word "flair" is "flare."
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
The word flair is a noun, a common, abstract noun.