preen
Definitions
noun
A forked tool used by clothiers for dressing cloth.
A pin.
She never seemed to want for siller; the house was as bright as a new preen, the yaird better delved than the manse garden; […]
A bodkin; brooch.
verb
To pin; fasten.
verb
To groom; to trim or dress the feathers with the beak.
To spend time making oneself attractive and admiring one's appearance, e.g. in front of a mirror.
Mr Kernan halted and preened himself before the sloping mirror of Peter Kennedy, hairdresser. Stylish coat, beyond a doubt. Scott of Dawson street. Well worth the half sovereign I gave Neary for it.
To show off, posture, or smarm.
His preening self-satisfaction, chest thrown forward as he settles into a chair in his mansion...
Impressed by their looks and their dancing, but not their singing, Mr. Farian called them Milli Vanilli and recorded an album of lightweight, preening dance-pop under their name, using uncredited studio musicians.
To flatter.
In Miller's view the play is expressive of a peculiarly Renaissance vision of the harmonious marriage within the orderly society: 'its spirit derives from Elizabethan Puritanism's view of the household as an orderly place in whichc the marriage is consecrated not in the church but in the orderly procedures of domesticity ; in which obedience is required , not in order to preen the male pride of the father, but to restore order in a fallen world '
New York nurtured and preened the most sophisticated audiences in the nation.
To comb; to make orderly.
My two roommates are engineers who preen the diesels.
Preen the deer hair rearward around the hook shank, and take 3 tight thread wraps to secure it.