Exaltado in english

Exalted

pronunciation: ɪgzɔltɪd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

exaltado = glamourised [glamorized, -USA] ; hothead ; hot-headed [hotheaded] ; exalted ; stoked. 

Example: Illegally transferring information can range from the extreme of the often glamourised international espionage to the more traditional and common gathering of competitive intelligence.Example: This put the matter down to the work of a marginal fringe of hotheads & lunatics.Example: The 1996 film of 'Romeo and Juliet' is a gripping presentation of Shakespeare's story of star-crossed lovers in an impulsive, hot-headed, violent world.Example: To his intimates Poe frequently spoke of the exalted state, which he defined as ecstasy, in which he wrote his poems of imagination.Example: Needless to say, she was pretty stoked about the prospect of having her own wheels.

exaltar = glorify ; exalt ; put + Nombre + on a pedestal ; hold out as ; laud ; glamourise [glamorize, -USA] ; enthrone ; aggrandise [aggrandize, -USA] ; celebrate ; bepraise ; big up ; set + Nombre + on a pedestal. 

Example: Many traditional treatments, on the other hand, have tended to glorify him portraying him as an unblemished hero.Example: He is famous for his works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.Example: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Example: Community information services seem light years away from the kind of electronic wizardry that is held out as the brave new information world of tomorrow.Example: Libraries are also lauded for providing other public services with economic benefits.Example: Librarians now have recognized that automated information retrieval is a logical extension of good reference service and is not usually categorized or glamorized as a separate function.Example: Modern life 'enthrones reason over impulse'.Example: He established Samarkand as his imperial capital in the 1360s and set about aggrandising it with plunder from his conquests.Example: Were we to allow ourselves to be enticed by it, we should be celebrating our Bicentennial by a return to the pre-Panizzi days in cataloging.Example: The newspapers, metropolitan and provincial, have bepraised or bespattered her; she has been deified in prose, and ridiculed in verse.Example: This dance festival bigs up the diverse and exciting range of high quality dance theatre talent we've got on our very own doorstep.Example: Throughout their relationship, he had a tendency to idealize her: to set her on a pedestal, treating her as a goddess instead of mortal.

more:

» exaltarsefire upget + Reflexivo + (all) worked up .

Example: The sheer margin of the challenger's victory over the incumbent is a sign that the Democratic base is really fired up, and that Bush could be an albatross.

Example: I'm not sure if it actually worked or if I was just so excited about getting high that I got all worked up.

Exaltado synonyms

high in spanish: alto, pronunciation: haɪ part of speech: adjective noble in spanish: noble, pronunciation: noʊbəl part of speech: adjective lofty in spanish: elevado, pronunciation: lɔfti part of speech: adjective idealistic in spanish: idealista, pronunciation: aɪdiəlɪstɪk part of speech: adjective rarefied in spanish: enrarecido, pronunciation: rerəfaɪd part of speech: adjective rarified in spanish: enrarecido, pronunciation: rerəfaɪd part of speech: adjective high-minded in spanish: magnánimo, pronunciation: haɪmaɪndɪd part of speech: adjective noble-minded in spanish: de mente noble, pronunciation: noʊbəlmɪndɪd part of speech: adjective high-flown in spanish: alto vuelo, pronunciation: haɪflaʊn part of speech: adjective
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