Definition of "fanfare"
fanfare
noun
countable and uncountable, plural fanfares
(countable, uncountable) A show of ceremony or celebration.
Quotations
I have arrived to catch the 0830 TfW service to Crewe, worked by a tatty and unrefurbished 175114. As if ashamed of its appearance, it slinks into Platform 2 (instead of Platform 1, where it was expected). No announcement had been made, and we leave without any fanfare.
2020 December 2, Paul Bigland, “My weirdest and wackiest Rover yet”, in Rail, page 67
Fans relished the traditional FA Cup fanfare from the Coldstream Guards and the hymn Abide With Me before throwing themselves wholeheartedly into an experience they have been largely deprived of since the first coronavirus lockdown began in March 2020.
2021 May 15, Phil McNulty, “Chelsea 0-1 Leicester”, in BBC Sport
verb
third-person singular simple present fanfares, present participle fanfaring, simple past and past participle fanfared
Quotations
To mark an arrival or departure with music, noise, or drama.
Quotations
She stepped neatly into the fray, took up Rover's slack lead and marched him briskly in a northerly direction away from the miniature foe, their retreat fanfared by the triumphant sound of the terrier who obviously thought he had bested an unworthy opponent, and who strutted after them for a few yards, just to make sure they moved well off his territory.
2005, Lesley Zobian, The Hanged Man, page 82
Among the memorable characters in this epic enterprise are the power-hungry Kenneth Widmerpool, whose beginnings are inauspicious, but who eventually achieves formidable influence through a series of ruthless manoeuvres, and Sir Magnus Donners, at whose mansion World War II is fanfared with a charade of the seven deadly sins.
2006, Dominic Head, The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English, page 271
Quotations
It was fanfared as 'hello, 1964' and advertised as 'the place billionaires goto get away from millionaires'.
2012, Douglas Thompson, Mafialand
My final pick from my fortnight of engaging with the cold callers was 'Sasha' from The Consumer Centre which, she fanfared, acted for leading UK businesses and charities (I will not name the firms she said she was representing but they are all highly regarded names who I imagine would run a mile from Sasha and her colleagues).
2014, Frances Kay, Allan Esler Smith, The Good Retirement Guide 2014
Quotations