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hagiographer

NOUN
  1. the author of a worshipful or idealizing biography

How To Use hagiographer In A Sentence

  • How appropriate of Dan Lyons, the experienced hagiographer of SCO. Fake Steve Jobs v. NYT over Zynga-gate - Boing Boing
  • Even today her media hagiographers like to affect the notion that she spoke an intrinsic Aussie truth which has escaped those lofty elitists who befuddle their brains by actually reading a book or two.
  • That is what the hagiographers were convinced they were doing, and so must their transmitters be.
  • Barton Gellman of the Washington Post has now joined feature writers from Time in aping Cheney's hagiographer in chief, Stephen Hayes of The Pundits Trying to Help Cheney Avoid Jail
  • The tenth-century hagiographer seems to have thought as much.
  • The Richard III Society remains firmly convinced that Richard III was foully traduced by revisionists like William Shakespeare and other Tudor dynasty hagiographers.
  • Not sure if this is the work of some Jackson family-hired spin-doctor cum hagiographer, but here from Carolyn Kellog in the L.A. Times: 2009 June | NIGEL BEALE NOTA BENE BOOKS
  • Thus, while both chroniclers and hagiographers tended to fall into the prevalent pattern of ignoring women as authoritative sources, nevertheless, they relied on women's evidence.
  • If he runs, who would replace "thrill up my leg" Matthews as MSNBC's resident Obama hagiographer? print share Chris Matthews
  • A quick search reveals the Reverend Sabine Baring-Gould - born 1834; died 1924 - was a hagiographer, antiquarian, novelist and prolific travel writer, whose accomplishments include a 16-volume lives of the saints and the book of werewolves. Getting From Here To There, The Retro Way
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