Formal+praise
11laudation — laud ► VERB formal ▪ praise highly. DERIVATIVES laudation noun. ORIGIN Latin laudare, from laus praise …
12Diego de San Pedro — (ca. 1437 ca. 1498) was a Castilian writer about whom no one knows very much other than what he says in his works. Scholars also rely on what they infer from the context in which he wrote them and the many nobles to whom he has been linked.… …
13plaudits — plau|dits [ˈplo:dıts US ˈplo: ] n [plural] [Date: 1600 1700; : Latin; Origin: plaudite! applaud! , from plaudere to applaud ] formal praise and admiration win/draw/receive etc plaudits ▪ Her performance won plaudits from the critics …
14plaudits — plau|dits [ plɔdıts ] noun plural FORMAL praise: The design of the building has won plaudits from around the world …
15blandishments — noun (plural) formal praise and nice remarks about someone that are intended to persuade them or influence someone: She was immune to both their threats and their blandishments …
16plaudits — noun (plural) formal praise and admiration: Her performance won the plaudits of the critics …
17plaudits — UK [ˈplɔːdɪts] / US [ˈplɔdɪts] noun [plural] formal praise The design of the building has won plaudits from around the world …
18plaudits — [ˈplɔːdɪts] noun [plural] formal praise …
19laudation — n. formal praise. Etymology: L laudatio onis (as LAUD) …
20ap·pro·ba·tion — /ˌæprəˈbeıʃən/ noun [noncount] formal : praise or approval The company has even received the approbation of its former critics …