v. [f. prec. + -IZE.] a. intr. To become flamboyant. b. trans. To render flamboyant.
1846. Ecclesiologist, VI. Aug., 7071. The date would appear to be about 1350, just when Middle-Pointed, in France, was beginning to Flamboyantize; and the windows of S. Marys are anything but English Middle-Pointed, and not pure French Middle-Pointed, and yet cannot be called Flamboyant; the mingled efforts of English workmen and a French architect, somewhat moulded by the influence of a transitional period, has resulted in the singular composition before us. Ibid. (1857), XVIII. Aug., 229. In the south transept are two great marigolds; one Flamboyantised, and one remaining Romanesque.