talent, aptitude, knack (Check a thesaurus online for others.)
ability, gift capacity, endowment, flair, bent, genius
spunk, flair, gumption, style, enthusiasm, audacity, arrogance, impudence, insolence, nerve, cockiness, energy, zeal, lust, passion, ambition,
Your question lacks flair.
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.'
(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)
ability, gift capacity, endowment, flair, bent, genius
Run, sprint, bolt, flair, style, panache, drop, pinch, taste, bound, hurry, race...
spunk, flair, gumption, style, enthusiasm, audacity, arrogance, impudence, insolence, nerve, cockiness, energy, zeal, lust, passion, ambition,
No, flair is a noun; the pronoun that replaces flair is 'it'. Example uses:A flair for invention is a good thing, it will take you far.
With a Flair was created in 1971.
(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.
Ric Flair is currently in TNA.
A homophone for the word "flair" is "flare."
Your question lacks flair.
ric flair is was the leader of evolution
Nicholas Flair was born in 1975.
Flair Airlines was created in 2005.