View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Laudatory.

Laudatory

Laudatory meaning

Of or pertaining to praise, or the expression of praise.

Synonyms of Laudatory

Example sentences (20)

On a Facebook page appearing to belong to Mangione, comments since his identification as a person of interest ranged from laudatory to insulting.

And as Biden begins to screw up, the coverage will become even more laudatory.

On the whole, the affidavit is self-laudatory.

In his laudatory message to “Ekal”, PM Modi commended its efforts to give educational opportunity to children in tribal areas and empowering rural women-folks.

All this unsolicited hero-worship and symbolic baubles appeared to impress Suu Kyi when she was inundated with them – and she clearly enjoyed the laudatory attention.

But when it was over, Jamie Rhee joked that it was more like attending her own funeral and having the pleasure of hearing the laudatory eulogies while you’re still alive.

In turn, Trump has rewarded Hatch with laudatory tweets and by signing a proclamation cutting about 2 million acres from Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments.

Republicans aren’t quite so laudatory toward Brown.

She was highly favorable to business leaders in the Morgan ambit, as witness her laudatory biographies of Judge Elbert H. Gary, of US Steel (1925) and Owen D. Young of General Electric (1932).

The library board will surprise us all with little known factoids about its history (which could very well be included in a future Trivia Night) and then recognize the tremendous contributions of its volunteers with goodies and laudatory comments.

The result of Graham's new attitude has been laudatory praise from Trump and his allies in the Republican Party, along with winning access to the president's ear on key issues.

When it was screened at the Toronto International Film Festival this past September, Owen Gleiberman wrote an extremely laudatory review of the film for Variety.

Aside from the text itself, the book includes five elements that parody common features of mass-market books: * A laudatory back cover review, written at Harvard, possibly by the authors themselves.

Beckett's 1930 essay Proust was strongly influenced by Schopenhauer 's pessimism and laudatory descriptions of saintly asceticism.

Client Harry Houdini was laudatory, and attempted to help Lovecraft by introducing him to the head of a newspaper syndicate.

Gregory, A History of Byzantium, 49. He built a new imperial residence at Byzantium and renamed the city Constantinople after himself (the laudatory epithet of "New Rome" came later, and was never an official title).

In 1900 his laudatory review of Henrik Ibsen 's When We Dead Awaken was published in Fortnightly Review ; it was his first publication and, after learning basic Norwegian to send a fan letter to Ibsen, he received a letter of thanks from the dramatist.

In 2006, Crosby's niece, Carolyn Schneider, published the laudatory book Me and Uncle Bing.

I, p. 431. Other historians have taken a far less laudatory view, arguing that genuine democracy began to arise only with the Second Reform Act in 1867, or perhaps even later.

Several nineteenth- and twentieth-century Republicans entered politics by writing laudatory biographies of Hamilton.