From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfloutflout /flaʊt/ verb [transitive] DISOBEYto deliberately disobey a law, rule etc, without trying to hide what you are doing Some companies flout the rules and employ children as young as seven.deliberately/openly flout something The union had openly flouted the law.► see thesaurus at disobey→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
flout• It was because he openly flouted racist conventions of the time, which said he had to stay in his place.• Accusations have been made that bus drivers already flout speed limits on the estate.• Thousands of people are killed on our roads every year, yet a majority of us insist on flouting speed limits.• Many bar owners flout the laws on under-age drinking.• Short stay charges and places in premium car parks have risen and drivers caught flouting the rules face a hefty £30 fine.• He especially enjoyed this party because it was flouting tradition -- it was four years after its customary time.• Too many people regularly flout traffic laws.Origin flout (1500-1600) Probably from flout “to play the flute” ((14-16 centuries))