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proud adjective [ praʊd ]

• feeling deep pleasure or satisfaction as a result of one's own achievements, qualities, or possessions or those of someone with whom one is closely associated.
• "a proud grandma of three boys"
Similar: pleased (with), glad (about/at), happy (about/at/with), delighted (about/at/with), joyful (at), overjoyed (at/over), thrilled (at/about/by/with), well pleased (with), satisfied (with), gratified (at), content (at), appreciative (of),
Opposite: ashamed,
• having or showing a high or excessively high opinion of oneself or one's importance.
• "he was a proud, arrogant man"
• slightly projecting from a surface.
• "balls standing proud of the fabric"
Similar: projecting, sticking out/up, jutting, jutting out, protruding, prominent, raised, convex, elevated,
Opposite: concave, flush,
Origin: late Old English prūt, prūd ‘having a high opinion of one's own worth’, from Old French prud ‘valiant’, based on Latin prodesse ‘be of value’. The phrase proud flesh dates back to late Middle English, but the sense ‘slightly projecting’ is first recorded in English dialect of the 19th century.

do someone proud

• act in a way that gives someone cause to feel pleased or satisfied.
"they did themselves proud in a game which sent the fans home happy"



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