Alabado in english
Praised
pronunciation: preɪzd part of speech: verb
pronunciation: preɪzd part of speech: verb
In gestures
alabar = worship ; laud ; hold + Nombre + up for praise ; praise ; sing + Posesivo + praises ; toady to ; fawn (on/upon/over) ; bepraise.
Example: The article concludes that librarians should not worship communication but they should practice it.Example: Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Example: Politicians give us many reasons to worry, and I don't usually hold them up for public praise.Example: In spite of their protestations to the contrary, most bosses prefer subordinates whom they get along with, who cause them no anxiety, who quietly accept their decisions, who praise them.Example: Frustrated devotees had been singing his praises for years, to no avail.Example: The function of journalism is not to toady to those in power but to challenge them.Example: Presumably they do so in the hope of being tossed some meaningless bauble of an honour when they have fawned enough.Example: The newspapers, metropolitan and provincial, have bepraised or bespattered her; she has been deified in prose, and ridiculed in verse.more:
» alabar de boquilla = give + lip service .
Example: It was found that despite lip service given to the importance of information retrieval, specialists go about searching and processing information in a very rudimentary way.» que se alaba a uno mismo = self-congratulatory .
Example: Professional literature on the early history of US librarianship has invariably been self-congratulatory, portraying the pioneer librarians as enlightened beyond expectations.