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WordWealth:
boulevardier
bou·le·var·dier ("bu-l&-"vär-'dyA,
"bü-, -'dir)
n., pl.
1. a person who frequents the most fashionable Parisian
locales (A sophisticated, worldly, and socially active man; a man who
frequents fashionable places; a man-about-town). 2. See bon vivant.
[1875–80; < F; see BOULEVARD,
-IER2]
(Random
House Webster's, Unabridged). Look at
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Oswald, whose idea of
excitement is breakfasting with a penguin, is a boulevardier:
Hat cocked precariously on his head, he saunters out into the sunny
city. —— Tom Gliatto, "Tube,"
People,
July 22, 2002
Bratton had been running
about town, having his picture taken in trendy restaurants, seeking
and getting headlines -- a regular gay boulevardier
from the Roaring Twenties. —— Sydney H. Schanberg, "Cops'
D.C. Spree Calls for Outside Watchdog,"
Newsday,
May 30, 1995
The "Night Mayor of New
York" was, Mitgang writes, "a hometown boy, part Kilkenny
sentimentalist, part Greenwich Village boulevardier."
—— David Walton, "Go Fight City Hall,"
New York Times, January 9, 2000
Boulevardier is from French, from boulevard, from Old
French bollevart, "rampart converted to a promenade," from
Middle Low German bolwerk, "bulwark."
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