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The word "laud" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used as a verb to describe praising someone or something, as in the sentence "The mayor lauded the community for its volunteer work."
Exact(56)
Many Egyptians laud Sisi for rescuing the country from ex-president Mohamed Morsi, an Islamist whose opponents felt was trying to rob Egypt of its moderate character.
Despite the setback, those involved continue publicly to laud the project's green credentials.
Vladimir Putin, Mr Medvedev's predecessor and successor, takes every opportunity to laud his country's nuclear prowess, and is committing a third of Russia's booming military budget to bolstering it.It is not the only power investing in its nukes (see table).
Europe may therefore have been well equipped for its post-war decades of chasing the United States, but did not adopt the policies needed to push back the technological limits.The second observation is that, whereas most theories of growth laud the accumulation of capital, it is sometimes good to see it destroyed.
Before Mr Renzi became leader of the centre-left Democratic Party (PD), Mr Berlusconi seldom missed an opportunity to laud him.Last January, less than three months after the TV tycoon's conviction and subsequent expulsion from parliament, Mr Renzi invited him to his party's headquarters to clinch a deal whereby Forza Italia would support a project for constitutional reform.
Two front-runners are Ibrahim Babangida, a former military ruler, who annulled elections in 1993, and Atiku Abubakar, Mr Obasanjo's estranged deputy, who was quick to laud the Senate vote.
THE annual Skytrax airport awards seem to exist to laud Far Eastern operations.
Similar(4)
About 1633 he printed in the Netherlands two Latin treatises, entitled Elenchus Religionis Papisticae and Flagellum Pontificis et Episcoporum Latialium; and because William Laud and other English prelates thought themselves the target of the treatises, he was fined, excommunicated, and prohibited from practicing medicine; his books were burned, and he was consigned to prison.
1593 Writtle September 1654 or October 1654 England John Bastwick, (born 1593, Writtle, Essex, Eng. died September/October 1654) English religious zealot who, in the reign of Charles I, opposed the liturgical and ecclesial reforms introduced by Archbishop William Laud into the Church of England, reforms that Bastwick believed to represent a return to "popery".
Suspected of Puritan leanings by William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury, he counterattacked Puritans on episcopacy's behalf.
The university's statutes were codified by its chancellor, Archbishop William Laud, in 1636.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com