Formally expressing praise.
Синонимы
Examples for "panegyric "
Examples for "panegyric "
1 Its news media brims, as usual, with panegyric propaganda extolling Kim's leadership.
2 The panegyric prepared by us for to-morrow must offer some great novelty.
3 To many this may appear a singular panegyric on the Italian tongue.
4 He is so well-known that I need not undertake his panegyric here.
5 Poems, containing a panegyric on the King, and songs and sonnets, Lond.
1 The major had prepared a long and eulogistic harangue for the occasion.
2 The writings of the ancients abound with references to them, mostly eulogistic .
3 Captain Thénault of the American Escadrille delivered an exceptionally eulogistic funeral oration.
4 The enthusiast spoke of Varvara Pavlovna in the most eulogistic terms.
5 All biography has been said to be eulogistic in its nature.
1 So now she filled a whole page of her diary with panegyrical regrets.
2 But the panegyrical chants became of more importance.
3 We have studiously avoided portraying fashionable life according to the vulgar notions, whether depreciatory or panegyrical .
4 What have philosophers to do with festive celebrities, and panegyrical solemnities with mathematical and physical truth?
5 I saw another letter from a lady at Paris, in which there was a high panegyrical paragraph concerning you.
1 Thus Donne shows his medicinal knowledge in some encomiastic verses:
2 At the publication the wits seemed proud to pay their attendance with encomiastic verses.
3 To this pamphlet, Governor Hamilton had prefixed "an encomiastic advertisement."]
4 In rhetoric, they say the first part was demonstrative or encomiastic , the second deliberative, the third judicial.
5 He published, soon afterwards, a volume of poems, with the encomiastic character of his deceased patron, the Earl of Dorset.
6 Of the verses on Oliver's death, in which Wood's narrative seems to imply something encomiastic , there has been no appearance.
7 This little book contains an account of the trial of Richard II., and was dedicated to the Earl of Essex in very encomiastic terms.
8 His works were published in 1651, and to them were prefixed fifty copies of encomiastic verses from the wits and poets of the time.
9 It may be remarked, that in this elegy, and in most of his encomiastic poems, he has forgotten or neglected to name his heroes.
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