glorify

IPA: gɫˈɔrʌfaɪ

verb

  • (transitive) To exalt, or give glory or praise to (something or someone).
  • (transitive) To make (something) appear to be more glorious than it is; regard something or someone as excellent baselessly.
  • (transitive) To worship or extol.
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Examples of "glorify" in Sentences

  • Now you must embrace, encourage, glorify ... in other words,
  • This Hebrew word, often translated as "glorify," is obscure.
  • I don't know how to answer the idea that one can "glorify" the past.
  • Summerworks spokeswoman Daniela Syrovy says the play doesn't "glorify" terrorism.
  • I magnify -- "glorify" mine office -- The clause beginning with "inasmuch" should be read as a parenthesis.
  • Another thing the museum does not turn a blind eye to, nor does it overly glorify, is just how many of its inductees and honorees are dead.
  • Perhaps we may best gain some glimpses of their great and holy sublimity by trying to gather their teaching round the centres of the three petitions, 'glorify' (vs. 1, 5),
  • And what is very remarkable, in five brief clauses He repeats this word "glorify" five times, as if to His view a coruscation of glories played at that moment about the Cross.
  • The glory of an object, of a thing or person, is its intrinsic worth or excellence: to glorify is to remove everything that could hinder the full revelation of that excellence.
  • Those who 'glorify' Chavez today, will pretend to be surprised tomorrow, and they will say that if they had only known, they would NOT have supported him and would have turned him in saying that he is guilty of his own misfortunes.

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synonyms for glorify
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