laud
IPA: ɫˈɔd
noun
- Glorification or praise.
- Hymn of praise.
- (in the plural, also Lauds) A prayer service following matins.
- A surname.
- An unincorporated community in Washington Township, Whitley County, Indiana, United States.
verb
- (transitive, intransitive) To praise; to glorify.
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Examples of "laud" in Sentences
- Players laud mediator's efforts.
- Port of Tilbury awards laud employees.
- They laud swift approval of stimulus plan.
- In holiday greetings, they laud military families.
- The generous move was lauded by many in the media.
- Former cricketers laud Pakistan's triumph over India.
- The conquistadors accepted and lauded hierarchy and rank.
- She is currently the Artistic Director of the lauded Bravo
- Experts laud bishop's safe and satisfying economic strategy.
- In addition to vegetarianism, he lauds chastity, work, and teetotalism.
- The Span. ‘laud is larger and deeper than the guitar, and its seven strings are played upon with
- Razzies 'laud' 'Transformers' and Bullock photo: Public Domain/Petty Officer 1st Class Mark O'Donald
- Poured hot oil an 'laud'num into it, an' kept a hot brick rolled up in flannel against it, but didn't do no good.
- This form, as we shall see, was the immediate outgrowth of the "laud," but one of its ancestors was the open-air performances.
- The White House also joined in to "laud" the Senator for coming to Washington to help bailout the companies that put us in this mess in the first place.
- After having sent one of M'laud's juniors up the hill with his tail on fire, the Senior Healer had evidently decided to teach his juniors about kestra-chern directly.
- If what we as a society generally laud is the end result of ambition, the movie is fascinating for laying bare the ugly and insecure process to such a polished end product.
- Together with these verses of Dante, Fra Angelico, while endeavouring to depict the dance of the blessed, may well have called to mind these verses of a sacred laud, which is said to be by Iacopone da Todi and