TOEIC Link Part 5: flair versus flare
Flair and flare sound identical, but they belong to different worlds of meaning. Flair is a natural talent or a sense of style; flare is a sudden burst of light, flame, or intensity — and, as a verb, the act of widening outward. Because the two are homophones, Part 5 can drop the wrong spelling into a blank and reward the reader who processes only the sound. For another pair separated by a single sound, see complement versus compliment.
The core rule: talent versus burst
- flair (noun) = a natural talent, aptitude, or distinctive stylishness. She has a flair for design. / The presentation was delivered with real flair.
- flare (noun) = a sudden burst of flame, light, or intensity; also a signal light and a gradual widening. A flare lit up the night sky. / tensions began to flare.
The clue is what the sentence is about. Flair describes ability or style — something a person possesses and shows. Flare describes a sudden increase or outward spread — of light, heat, anger, or shape. One is a gift; the other is an eruption.
Why Part 5 likes this pair
The two words attach to completely different ideas, so the noun or context usually decides the answer.
The new manager handled the crisis with a natural __ for calming people down.
The blank names a talent for doing something well, so flair fits. A burst of flame cannot be a talent.
Prices are expected to __ up sharply after the supply disruption.
Here the blank names a sudden increase, so the verb flare is required.
Spotting the clue in the structure
Ask whether the sentence is praising ability or describing a burst:
- It names a talent, knack, or stylish quality a person has → choose flair (a flair for languages, dressed with flair).
- It names a sudden burst of light, flame, temper, or a widening shape → choose flare (a distress flare, tempers flared, flared trousers).
A quick test settles most items: if you could swap in talent or style, you want flair; if you could swap in burst or blaze, you want flare. For another pair where meaning, not sound, decides the answer, see eminent versus imminent.
Quick self-check
- He has a real __ for spotting undervalued stocks. (flair — natural talent)
- The argument caused old resentments to __ up again. (flare — burst of intensity)
Takeaway
If the blank names a natural talent or stylishness, you need flair. If it names a sudden burst of light, flame, or intensity — or an outward widening — you need flare. Decide whether the sentence admires an ability or describes an eruption, and two identical-sounding words stop competing. For a related pair decided by meaning rather than spelling, see principal versus principle.