¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Laudations
1. laudation [n] - See also: laudation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Laudations
Literary usage of Laudations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of the Life and Times of James Madison by William Cabell Rives (1868)
"... Madison to Assaults on Virginia, and Extravagant Laudations of their own State
by Messrs. Ames and Dexter — Close of First Session of Third Congress. ..."
2. The Financial Economy of the United States Illustrated by John Alexander Ferris (1867)
"We hear on all sides the laudations of a uniform currency, and California is
considered by some fanatics as the foe to her own progress, because she does ..."
3. The Life of Theodore Roosevelt: Twenty-fifth President of the United States by Murat Halstead (1902)
"... Three Pre-eminently Great Men—Aspirations Revealed in His Laudations—He Corrects
a First Impression— Loves Cowboys, but "There Are Others"—How He Became ..."
4. Railway Locomotive Management, in a Series of Letters by Veritas vincit (1847)
"ensue, I would suggest to Mr. Kirtley not to build too much on the fulsome
laudations of the Directors in their last Report, for they were given only to ..."
5. Studies in History, Legend and Literature by Henry Schütz Wilson (1884)
"This fact alone, to my mind, robs Ariosto's laudations of Lucrezia of all moral
worth or value. Again, Herr Gregorovius asks whether Lucrezia's letter to ..."