Fanfare in a sentence as a noun

They don't sue. They don't get fanfare for it.

So you tried to launch this with great fanfare and couldn't be bothered to review your AUP?

I don't get all this fanfare over coffee with respect to all these processes and equipment etc.

They'd be idiots and incredibly poor businessmen if they didn't announce it with some fanfare.

Every time they rebrand or **** a technology that they rolled out with great fanfare, I become less and less likely to trust them with an investment.

He made something a while ago, put on the market without much fanfare and then out of the blue his game suddenly shot to the top and raked in 50 million downloads.

It makes Google look amateurish to announce a product with big fanfare and to cancel it later admitting that it does not do much... executive powerplays at work I guess...

There are several other companies that we're aware of, all shipping products today and beginning to carve out parts of the market with relatively little fanfare.

This is an awful lot of fanfare for the open sourcing of something that was funded with public money by the government of Australia, using open source tools and technologies.

TSA does more than just airports"With little fanfare, the agency best known for airport screenings has vastly expanded its reach to sporting events, music festivals, rodeos, highway weigh stations and train terminals.

You should run your service aware of the fact that major vulnerabilities in third-party library code are often fixed without fanfare or advisories; when maintainers don't know exactly who's affected how, the whole announcement might happen in a git commit.

Educated at the best institutions, mentored by the greatest geniuses of his day, and encouraged by his incredible past successes in the field, he had begun to work on the problem with as great of fanfare as can exist within an academic community.

Whistleblowers would approach them with documents from all manner of sources from governments to corporations to religious institutions, they would be subjected to source verification, and then they would be published and indexed for the world to see with minimum fanfare.

Fanfare definitions

noun

a gaudy outward display

See also: ostentation flash

noun

(music) a short lively tune played on brass instruments; "he entered to a flourish of trumpets"; "her arrival was greeted with a rousing fanfare"

See also: flourish tucket