[
US
/ˈsɛɫəˌbɹeɪtɪd/
]
[ UK /sˈɛləbɹˌeɪtɪd/ ]
[ UK /sˈɛləbɹˌeɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
widely known and esteemed
a renowned painter
an illustrious judge
a notable historian
a famous actor
a famed scientist
a celebrated musician - having an illustrious past
How To Use celebrated In A Sentence
- The Chinese Dragon Boat Festival is a significant holiday celebrated in China, and the one with the longest history. The Dragon Boat Festival is celebrated by boat races in the shape of dragons. Competing teams row their boats forward to a drumbeat racing to reach the finish end first.
- When my sister taught at a junior school they celebrated all the religious festivals.
- The Chinese Dragon Boat Festival is a significant holiday celebrated in China, and the one with the longest history. The Dragon Boat Festival is celebrated by boat races in the shape of dragons. Competing teams row their boats forward to a drumbeat racing to reach the finish end first.
- Fr. Stephen celebrated fifty years as a priest recently and the occasion was marked by the concelebration of Mass in St. Patricks Church, Clonbur on last Friday evening.
- Eid al Fitr in Oman is celebrated over a period of three days after the end of the month of Ramadan. Global Voices in English » Oman: Eid on Twitter
- No individual hero is celebrated in The Four Days, no single villain vilipended.
- A celebrated public speaker, he established the tradition of commemorative oratory in the United States.
- Kaysersberg; finally, in one of the vestries is the epitaph, in german verses, of the celebrated printer John Mentelin of Historical Sketch of the Cathedral of Strasburg
- Tuesday at 3 p.m. place-holders started showing up outside the restaurant Galatoire's to stand in line so their well-heeled patrons can enjoy trout amandine and souffle potatoes Friday during the celebrated pre-Fat Tuesday fest. Archive 2005-02-01
- But marketing alone cannot explain why "onanism" and related terms began to show up in the great eighteenth-century encyclopedias or why one of the most influential physicians in France, the celebrated Samuel Auguste David Tissot, took up the idea of masturbation as a dangerous illness or why Tissot's 1760 work, L'Onanisme, became an instant European literary sensation. Me, Myself, and I