Flout — C2 Vocabulary

Not sure if this is your level?
Find out in 2 minutes — 8 simple questions.
Take the test →
§
flout
/FLOWT/

To break or ignore a rule, law, or custom openly and deliberately.

Quick Answer

Flout means to break a rule openly. You flout the law, the rules, or convention. Think: to flout is to defy on purpose.

Example: They openly flout the parking rules.

Flout in 3 Sentences

Read these three sentences. Notice how flout is used:

  • They openly flout the parking rules. (break them deliberately)
  • The company flouted safety regulations for years. (ignored the rules)
  • He flouts convention by wearing trainers to court. (defies custom openly)

A Quick Tip About FLOUT

Flout and flaunt are a classic trap. Flout = break the rules. Flaunt = show off. “Flout the rules” is correct; “flaunt the rules” is the mistake almost everyone makes.

Saying “flaunt” when you mean break a rule

Drivers who flaunt the speed limit get fined.
Drivers who flout the speed limit get fined.

Easy way to remember: to flOUT is to break OUT of the rules. Flout rhymes with “shout” — you loudly defy.

Practice all Flaunt vs Flout

Now practise flout together with the other words in this topic. Use Study, Practice, Flashcards, and Review.

CEFR C2 – Flaunt vs Flout

Flaunt vs Flout

Master flaunt and flout — a C2 pair that even well-educated writers confuse. Flaunt is to show off; flout is to break the rules.

2study words
2due today
0reviewed
0known
Browser audio ready

Study Cards

Read the word, look at the picture, and say the example sentence.

Test Yourself: Flout

Choose the correct answer for each sentence. Click Check to see if you are right.

Question 1 of 5

1. Drivers who ______ the speed limit face heavy fines.

2. Which word means “to break a rule openly”?

3. The factory ______ environmental laws for years.

4. To ______ convention is to defy accepted custom.

5. Protesters openly ______ the ban on gatherings.

Other Flaunt vs Flout to Learn

Pick another word from this lesson — small steps add up fast.

Keep Going — One Word, Many Wins

You just learned flout — and mastered a pair that trips up even professional editors. You now know that people flout rules and flaunt wealth.

English is full of these near-identical traps — discreet vs discrete, elicit vs illicit, principal vs principle. Each one is a small badge of a truly proficient writer. Which will you master next?

Next lesson: Flaunt — C2 Vocabulary

Spread the love

Similar Posts