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extol
/ ɪkˈstəʊl /
verb
(tr) to praise lavishly; exalt
Other Word Forms
- extoller noun
- extollingly adverb
- extolment noun
- extollment noun
- superextol verb (used with object)
- superextoll verb (used with object)
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of extol1
Example Sentences
At the heart of Kennedy’s ideology is an apparent belief in eugenics, something he shares with the president, who has extolled the “racehorse theory” and expressed confidence in his own “good German genes.”
He said the government is not “extolling racial profiling,” but “apparent ethnicity can be relevant to reasonable suspicion, especially in immigration enforcement.”
Writing in the Telegraph, keen allotmenteer Corbyn extolled the "joy of digging ground for potatoes" and warned that sales made "the future of these precious spaces even more perilous".
Woven throughout this prelude and the rest of the film is footage from Hernandez’s father’s archives; spots on local Texas public access television and new-age health videos extolling the properties of vitamins or infrared-beaming glasses.
The ceremony proceeded with the usual traditions: student musical performances, an array of speakers extolling the graduates, the calling of names.
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