Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
To the Bush administration, that sounds like political showboating.
"We're very humble, not a lot of showboating goes on.
It seems your showboating for the media is finally paying some dividends."
While her team concept remains constant, she can tolerate occasional showboating.
Your showboating and the conflict in Korea has just sped up my timetable.
There was no showboating around Dad, a stickler for fundamentals.
But he is not above a little showboating.
However, his showboating proved premature as the team managed to finish only fourth in the final.
Leave the intense promoting, the showboating and the bizarre behavior to others in boxing.
We have often appreciated his antipathy for political showboating.
Though wine has become a form of personal showboating that ranges from the unattractive to the laughable.
And also as expected, only two players from the 1994 world championship team, which made more headlines with its showboating than its play, were chosen.
Except this ambitious bit of showboating broke down.
Like a good athlete, this restaurant plays within itself: no overreaching, no showboating.
A little showboating going on there."
There is no showboating, no elaborate attempts to humiliate his opponent or play to the crowd.
Gastineau still harbors bad feelings over criticism within and outside the Jets' organization for what many felt was his excessive showboating.
"These idiots are the perpetrators of the loud pipes and ridiculous showboating around these bars."
Use the two-anchor system, though; no showboating."
No other frontman could get away with as much borderline corny showboating as Garvey.
He believes that "you have a duty" to play while hurt or exhausted, and he is unhappy about the showboating, contract-renegotiating behavior of today's players.
No showboating.
There wasn't any showboating.
Letters avoids such showboating.
"It's a gentleman's game in which there is no showboating or taunting, and the umpire is always addressed as 'Sir.' "