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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a laureate" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to someone who has been awarded a prize or honor, particularly in fields like literature, science, or the arts.
Example: "The conference will feature a discussion with a laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature."
Alternatives: "an award winner" or "a prize recipient."
Exact(59)
Antony Gormley, whose work includes the Angel of the North, was named as a laureate in the sculpture category while David Chipperfield became a laureate for architecture.
Levine can assume a laureate role, undertaking festival-style projects that play to his immense strengths.
Larkin's tender and inquisitive photography complicates his reputation as a laureate of despair.
Mr. Merwin is a laureate for our times, and we look forward to his tenure.
On some, the female figure of, presumably, Britannia, clasps a laureate Carausius by the hand.
In abetting this horrific slaughter, she has forfeited the right to call herself a laureate.
Students have sued a Laureate subsidiary, Walden University, for practices not unlike those of Trump University.
Aizenberg has been named a laureate of the Advanced Materials Hall of Fame.
Still, she concluded the state might be better off without a laureate.
This well-established group was a laureate of the 1975 Prague Spring International String Quartet Competition.
Similar(1)
(Perhaps Cohen ought to be a laureate but a Canadian already became one recently; they won't give the country another).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com