The word 'esteem' is correct and usable in written English. You can use it to refer to respect, admiration, or high regard for someone or something. For example: "The teacher held her student in high esteem.".
Taking her up on her offer, Farc said they were willing to "address her questions and esteem her opinions as a valuable contribution toward peace".
But that counts for nothing in Australia, where he is still held in the highest esteem, which is convenient as they just happen to be looking for a new coach.
True, the actual Queen has, quite independently, also earned ever-deepening esteem simply for being the only thing that stands between us and King Charles III.
Setting further access and waiting standards for mental health, and ensuring NHS organisations introduce parity of esteem, was vital to help patients, he added.
I now have a lot of dyslexics in school and their self-esteem is through the roof because they see a headteacher who is the same as them.
In fact, research shows that the academic pressure to fulfil potential put on children from such a young age can lead to huge self-esteem problems in their teenage years, when striving for perfectionism does not deliver the goods.
Women who worked at Dagenham now say they had far too much self-esteem to sit down to work in bra and panties; they were also rather older than the workforce shown in the film.
Thanks to Ludwig my first paper got accepted! The editor wrote me that my manuscript was well-written
Listya Utami K.
PhD Student in Biology, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia