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aggrandise

[ UK /ɐɡɹˈænda‍ɪz/ ]
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How To Use aggrandise In A Sentence

  • I wish every young fella with my background would know that it is a joy to learn and to aggrandise yourself.
  • With little to occupy their inner lives, they settle on sophomoric backbiting and relentless self-aggrandisement as the closest achievable thing to an actually mature expression of emotion or contact between two human beings.
  • I am totally unconvinced that these people understand or embrace anything, but are too often just looking to self-aggrandise and self-publicise their way to their personal nirvana. I’m Here For An Argument. No You’re Not! Yes I am! « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • The only ones who wont see it are at the top who joined for self promotion and aggrandisement. on April 9, 2009 at 4: 40 pm | Reply Joe Public You Have Mistaken Me For Someone Else « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • For all that Netanyahu's innate arrogance and self-aggrandisement was laid bare by the contents of the nine-year-old recording, the collective shrugging of shoulders implies that few expected anything else from a man who has been boasting of his own political prowess throughout his tumultuous career. Why Binyamin Netanyahu tape is no real shocker
  • I'm sure every creative innovator has moments of terrible self doubt says she, attempting to aggrandise a very unimportant issue. And it's Friday again already...
  • It is journalistic slop, political flatulence and religious aggrandisement, and it is deadly dangerous.
  • When we look back at the ashes of the Brown years there will be one thing that will be said about him; he really could spend oceans of other people's money for absolutely no return except to the aggrandisement of his own ego. Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
  • This last vilifying barb you offer in yet another comment when, having had the whole root of your hatred revealed in the posting of that email exchange, rather than actually give grounds for your risible concern with a purported conflict of interests, you continue your rancorous pillorying, not to mention the concomitant pompous self-aggrandisement. How Not to be a Writer
  • For the furtherance of his own career and self-aggrandisement, Hain knowingly accepted the work load of two departments. Archive 2008-01-01
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