celebrator
IPA: sˈɛɫʌbreɪtɝ
noun
- A person who celebrates or praises.
Advertisement
Examples of "celebrator" in Sentences
- If the 'celebrator' can't be named, his or her comment doesn't need to be included.
- You may be separated from loved ones, or Jewish or Buddhist or a Kwanzaa celebrator.
- The journey of my heart eventually led me to the mystic Sufi poet and celebrator of love ~ Rumi.
- Anyway, just commit yourself to becoming a passionate celebrator of the great work that those around you are doing.
- Khair concludes by speculating that one can only imagine the Reader-without-History as a non-reader, as a passive receptor, as a simple celebrator of the text, not as someone who interprets, guesses, digs.
- Promoted to Headline (H3) on 6/6/09: The Poet Of Love Is Rumi yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'The Poet Of Love Is Rumi'; yahooBuzzArticleSummary = 'Article: The journey of my heart eventually led me to the mystic Sufi poet and celebrator of love ~ Rumi.
- But it's all kept very low key with no rock-star nonsense by surf-celebrator Malloy, whose stylish documentary elevates all of the tour's nuances Endless Summer-style, with human moments outweighing grandeur and without the bro-chatter of the latter.
- He was a travelling carnival in a three thousand dollar suit, barking miracles yet unseen on Earth, a great lover of life, a celebrator of the little things, a glimmer of mindless hope, a grasshopper dancing merrily over the spider web of reality in which the rest of us twisted until consumed.
- Then the poetry establishment's outsized accolades gave them too big an idea of themselves, and they each turned into an image of what they were supposed to be like: Olds the intrepid forager among women's dirty little secrets, Graham the Old World philosopher-deconstructer of language, Glück the pithy celebrator of the domestic everyday event, Levine the working-class sage with no chips on his shoulders.
- Then the poetry establishment's outsized accolades gave them too big an idea of themselves, and they each turned into an image of what they were supposed to be like: Olds the intrepid forager among women's dirty little secrets, Graham the Old World philosopher-deconstructer of language, Glück the pithy celebrator of the domestic everyday event, Levine the working-class sage with no chips on his shoulders.
Advertisement
Advertisement