Bolder brides may opt for voluminous flair, while others go for a simpler flounce.
From the newsday.com
It is a way of swanking up the self, of giving it some swag and flounce and ormolu.
From the time.com
They flounce up, all bubbly and smiley and, well, it makes me want to vomit.
From the suntimes.com
But Google, if you're going to go all in, don't flounce around with Orkut.
From the techcrunch.com
With a flounce and a flip, she walks over to the table and opens the box.
From the sfgate.com
Lousena Joseph had her eye out for a little blue number, maybe something with a flounce.
From the orlandosentinel.com
The gays never campaigned for the right to flounce around in a church in puffy dresses.
From the theargus.co.uk
Despite their flounce, these outfits possessed Nicoll's signature impression of length.
From the hepburnadvocate.com.au
The frilly detail gave an otherwise sophisticated collection a little too much flounce.
From the bostonherald.com
More examples
Frill: a strip of pleated material used as a decoration or a trim
Walk emphatically
The act of walking with exaggerated jerky motions
In sewing and dressmaking, a ruffle, frill, or furbelow is a strip of fabric, lace or ribbon tightly gathered or pleated on one edge and applied to a garment, bedding, or other textile as a form of trimming. ...
A strip of decorative material, usually pleated, attached along one edge; a ruffle; The act of flouncing; To move in an exaggerated, bouncy manner; : To flounder; to make spastic motions
(Flounced) With one edge attached while the other edge is free and formed into a ruffle.
(Flounces) Appendages extending from the tip of the beard like little petals.
A wide piece of fabric or lace, gathered and attached at the hem.