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The phrase "cavalier of" is a grammatically correct and usable phrase in written English.
It can be used to describe someone as a fearless and gallant person, often used in a romantic or chivalrous context. Example: The knight was known as the cavalier of the battlefield, always charging into battle with bravery and valor.
Exact(16)
Gang, a veritable cavalier of cavil.
Toulouse's reputation as the laughing cavalier of European rugby rests largely upon performances against British and Irish teams.
A resounding mandate for such a vision at the polls would be a fitting political epitaph for the late laughing Cavalier of Lib Dem politics.
Inclined to cut the president some slack, James Wolcott of Vanity Fair said, reasonably, "At the very least it was a bit cavalier of Obama".
"Why not?" How cavalier of Johnson, who seems to have finally released himself from rigid conformity long enough to enjoy his status as Nascar's premier driver.
Not even the most cavalier of documentary crews have been ready to hop into the unseaworthy rubber boats that ferry hundreds of migrants across the Mediterranean every night.
Similar(44)
Pfizer makes it plain that the company does not agree with this kind of cavalier use of Viagra.
James failed to tell the Cavaliers of his decision before the broadcast.
Now they will make us Cavaliers of Shame, and correctly so.
There have been plenty of vacancies within the Cleveland Cavaliers of late.
JJ History Reprobates: The Cavaliers of the English Civil War, by John Stubbs (Viking).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com