Vainglorious in a sentence as an adjective

As the term "peacock" suggests, his writing is vainglorious.

At that time, I was naive and vainglorious enough to believe that the reasons for it were my 'vision'.

You're far more vainglorious and condescending about not running a scripting language in your browser than you should be.

Doltish, vainglorious, lazy and unfailingly boorish is what comes to my mind when I review the McKinsey people I've met.

The stack bias and navel-gazing of recruiters in their vainglorious attempts to prove that what they're doing is useful has reached peak.

I'm sorry my comment gave you such a bad impression of myself, and I can assure you that I am neither a stoned college freshman nor a vainglorious hipster.

Still, I thought that calling it the WorldWideWeb was vainglorious; after all, how worldwide was it really, running on the handful of NeXTs that had Internet connections?

" Tacking on a vainglorious service for an already successful project thats siphoning potential customers.

And don't come back untill...."Or was it a team of turtle necks sitting around a big table brain-storming and drinking gunpowder tea, feeding off each other's creativity in vainglorious efforts to go one step further than the last?

The article views only a single definition of "idiom", ignoring several that actually define a "social more".The useful content of the article is overshadowed by the vainglorious hyperbole.

There's a wonderful article[1] in London Review of Books in which Andrew O'Hagan, hired to be Assange's ghost writer, gradually becomes convinced - from a position of admiration - that Assange is a confused and vainglorious narcissist who has little interest in spreading information and far more in spreading the cult of Assange.

Vainglorious definitions

adjective

feeling self-importance; "too big for his britches"; "had a swelled head"; "he was swelled with pride"

See also: swelled