How To Use Plaudit In A Sentence

  • The letter went on and on, page after page, plaudit after plaudit.
  • The authors, both pollsters, will either win plaudits in future years or be forgotten like many hyperbolic, wrong-headed forecasters through the eons. Three books on the Tea Party, reviewed by Steven Levingston
  • Pickles has earned widespread plaudits since taking office for his energetic and radical approach to reforming local government. Times, Sunday Times
  • Obviously the “rich girls weep” gains applause and plaudits from the public at large and the government. Welcome ‘Times’ Readers « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • This is as it should be, for the _Misses_ ought to have an equal chance with the _Masters_ -- at least so say we, -- _plaudite_, clap your little hands, and _valete_, good bye! The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction Volume 12, No. 338, November 1, 1828
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  • However these are small qualms against an excellent project that deserves every plaudit for its unique enterprise.
  • First of all, we have Natalie Portman's astonishingly physical and emotional tour de force, which is worthy of every plaudit and award she has and will win. Scott Mendelson: 2010 in Review: Favorite Films of the Year
  • The scene won no plaudits for the students, nor can it have done their case to create public sympathy with their cause any good.
  • The 29-year-old deserves all the plaudits. The Sun
  • The plaudits remain valid in this recast production. Times, Sunday Times
  • He has won prizes from his peers and plaudits from discriminating academics.
  • I had heard from friends that over the past eight years the restaurant had gradually shed its pub grub stylings, dropping tuna toasties in favour of keta caviar - and had recently won plaudits under the guidance of new chef Craig Millar.
  • He earned a berth on the World team in the All-Star Game and received the ultimate plaudit from coach Darryl Sutter, who appraised Nabokov's play by admitting that, ‘I don't worry about our goaltending.’
  • There are times when someone decides that an album deserves plaudits, laurel wreaths and all round backslapping because it's an auspicious debut recorded without the help of some guy with a ponytail in a big office.
  • The plaudits remain valid in this recast production. Times, Sunday Times
  • For the next four years it drew critical plaudits and large audiences everywhere it was shown.
  • The clink of glasses is stilled for once over at Uborka to be replaced by the sound of slapped backs and plaudits being handed round.
  • But teasing from team-mates is as much a backhanded plaudit as jeers from opposition supporters, which is why both the ribbing and the heckling have been gathering momentum the older this season gets.
  • It has cocked a snook at Europe and won the necessary domestic plaudits.
  • I cannot believe I will not get another cheery call with a bright idea, a suggestion, a bit of encouragement, or a bit of a plaudit for something I might have done that had a bit of an effect.
  • A second public loo block in the Bradford district - at Ilkley's central car park - has also been given the three-star prestigious plaudit.
  • The forwards take the plaudits but our back five were outstanding. The Sun
  • He can take the plaudits and rightly so. The Sun
  • Whether receiving the plaudits of a country court for a successful defence, or the homage and praise of millions in this and other lands, for the liberation of a long-oppressed race and the preservation of the nation's life, he was the same modest, self-forgetting, unelated man. A Great Man Fallen!
  • He may have won plaudits from many in business because of his fiscal dryness, but he remains suspicious of the sector. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think it's fair to say that the cultural landscape of the year ahead is defined by whichever ditty the nation awards this sentimental plaudit.
  • In his _Penelope's Web_ he writes: "They which smiled at the theatre in Rome might as soon scoff at the rudeness of the scene as give a plaudite at the perfection of the acting. Shakespeare's Lost Years in London, 1586-1592
  • He has earned his plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • The politicians would be asked to give a refrain of their favourite tunes, while listeners vote on who should take the plaudit of York's finest political voice.
  • Has won many plaudits for his no-nonsense approach as midfield enforcer. The Sun
  • The quality of his photography earned/won him plaudits from the experts.
  • He is totally dedicated to others and deserves every plaudit for the work he does.
  • For that they could thank a sterling effort by the pack and a dominant display by stand-off Jonny Wilkinson, who justified every plaudit thrown his way these past few months.
  • He earned a berth on the World team in the All-Star Game and received the ultimate plaudit from coach Darryl Sutter, who appraised Nabokov's play by admitting that, ‘I don't worry about our goaltending.’
  • Even Angela Merkel, who had garnered rapturous and entirely undeserved plaudits for her diplomatic efforts during the German presidency, was chivied by a large section of the German media for not paying more attention to the problems at home. They do not appear to be happy
  • Theron wins the plaudits from Entertainment Weekly, too, which wrote that she ‘plays an unredeemable woman with uncompromising reality.
  • Yet he was someone whose whole career was based on seeking more fame and his every action was made in order to gain further plaudits and praise.
  • The wheeze won red-top plaudits, with the headline "the cap fits". Social security: The new poor law | Editorial
  • His portrayal of the limp-wristed, pouting Humphries drew as much criticism as it did plaudits.
  • He deservedly received plaudits for a barnstorming performance. Times, Sunday Times
  • As we see in Augustus Caesar (who was rather diverse from his uncle than inferior in virtue), how when he died he desired his friends about him to give him a plaudite, as if he were conscious to himself that he had played his part well upon the stage. The Advancement of Learning
  • It was significant that, overall, the defenders received most of the plaudits in an uneventful first half.
  • The letter went on and on, page after page, plaudit after plaudit.
  • Some people might say that “plaudit” has value as a substitute for “praise” if that word has appeared repeatedly. 2009 July 14 « One-Minute Book Reviews
  • He will win no plaudits for toadying to London and he has no future in Westminster anyway.
  • Now it is earning more plaudits thanks to an unlikely project that was launched last year. Times, Sunday Times
  • She's received plaudits for her work with homeless people.
  • Now, hardly a day goes by without City's England international receiving the plaudits and eulogies from the soccer community.
  • It has gained enthusiastic reviews from the critics and happy plaudits from satisfied diners. Times, Sunday Times
  • I think it's fair to say that the cultural landscape of the year ahead is defined by whichever ditty the nation awards this sentimental plaudit.
  • Maxime. te, Philaenium, mihi atque uxoris mortem, hoc Venerium est. pueri, plaudite et mi ob iactum cantharo mulsum date. Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
  • It has also won a number of awards and plaudits from trade magazines and national newspapers.
  • For the next four years it drew critical plaudits and large audiences everywhere it was shown.
  • He had thought that this next six months would see France once more in its rightful place as the natural leader of Europe, handing out this fatcat job here, this little pourboire there, accepting the plaudits from a grateful Eurcracy and European political elite for a job well and truly done. Archive 2008-06-29
  • All the plaudits that came Clarke's way and the ovations of the galleries were richly deserved.
  • Albright won plaudits for her tough stance on terrorism.
  • His most recent collection for spring/summer 2012, shown last month in New York, won plaudits for its more traditional, slinky, body-con aesthetic. Francisco Costa's Modern Aesthetic
  • In his absence, his new club, under their new coach, made a workmanlike start to the Premiership campaign, but won few plaudits for style.
  • They were the team who looked like world champions and they deserve every plaudit which will no doubt come their way.
  • It is a local pre-eminence that has been achieved with a style of football that won as many plaudits as points.
  • The novel deserves nearly every plaudit it has received.
  • Since his talents broke out of the conservatoire in the mid-noughties, British pianist Gwilym Simcock started insisting that composition was by no means a second string to the keyboard virtuosity that attracted plaudits from jazz stars as big as Chick Corea and Lee Konitz. This week's new live music
  • I cannot believe I will not get another cheery call with a bright idea, a suggestion, a bit of encouragement, or a bit of a plaudit for something I might have done that had a bit of an effect.
  • His boldness in taking forward the rescue plan has earned him plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • It has gained enthusiastic reviews from the critics and happy plaudits from satisfied diners. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a plaudit, "recently established definitive Russian text" may sound like a pedantic mouthful, but Platonov is anything but a writer of merely academic interest. A Different Stripe:
  • One side wants plaques and plaudits; the other demands contrition and recompense. Times, Sunday Times
  • They were the team who looked like world champions and they deserve every plaudit which will no doubt come their way.
  • _ Cp. the well-known epitaph: -- 'iam mea peracta, mox vestra agetur fabula: valete et plaudite.' The Apologia and Florida of Apuleius of Madaura
  • While Martinez got the plaudits she deserved, Navratilova was given the longest standing ovation Centre Court has ever seen.
  • The film smoothly rides on its success, earning the plaudit of being one of the highest-ever grossers in the Malayalam film industry.
  • Yet he was someone whose whole career was based on seeking more fame and his every action was made in order to gain further plaudits and praise.
  • The reaction and support of the viewers will always be of paramount importance but to also receive plaudits from our peers and colleagues is simply wonderful. Times, Sunday Times
  • However these are small qualms against an excellent project that deserves every plaudit for its unique enterprise.
  • If the portrayal is already generating Oscar talk, it's also better than such fatuous plaudits. GreenCine Daily: Cannes. A Mighty Heart.
  • Wayne Brady, who's up for the Outstanding Game Show Host plaudit, will host. General Hospital Leads Daytime Emmy Nominations
  • It deserves all the plaudits heaped upon it. Times, Sunday Times
  • The forwards take the plaudits but our back five were outstanding. The Sun
  • One side wants plaques and plaudits; the other demands contrition and recompense. Times, Sunday Times
  • For that they could thank a sterling effort by the pack and a dominant display by stand-off Jonny Wilkinson, who justified every plaudit thrown his way these past few months.
  • He's getting all the plaudits for walking, but what actually happened was that he forgot himself and started to move.
  • He is widely respected and has won plaudits for getting on with one of the toughest jobs in the country. The Sun
  • They'll have so many plaudits - there is sure to be a worldwide plaudit shortage.
  • By the plaudits he received, it was doubtless worthy of his fame.
  • He gave a furtive wave - aware that he was there to beat their team not take their plaudits. The Sun
  • A set of iconoclastic monks whom the Christian world is pleased to designate as St. Patrick, and who probably early in the fifth century of our era amused themselves by chiseling from the Irish monuments many of the symbols of the female power, removed also the figures of serpents which had for ages appeared in connection with the emblems of woman, and by this act won the plaudits of an admiring Christian world; chiefly, however, for the skill manifested in "banishing snakes from Ireland. The God-Idea of the Ancients
  • I fear the piece is at an end with the King of Prussia, and he may say ilicet; I am sure he may personally say plaudite. Letters to his son on The Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a Gentleman
  • Things were quite easy in a lot of ways - I was getting plaudits just for breathing. Times, Sunday Times
  • It has gained enthusiastic reviews from the critics and happy plaudits from satisfied diners. Times, Sunday Times
  • The collection has won plaudits from golfing past master and BBC sports commentator Peter Allis.
  • HE does not always get the plaudits he deserves. The Sun
  • People are angry and the über-rich, noticing this, are seeing pitchforks replacing attaboy plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • Back in New York, his ground-breaking model has provoked controversy as well as plaudits from the White House. Can Geoffrey Canada rescue America's ailing schools? Barack Obama hopes so
  • Owners nowadays are happy to take the plaudits when things are going well but ready to jump ship when they are not. The Sun
  • The new ‘headmaster’ of the Church of England gave his ‘squabbling pupils’ a stern talking-to yesterday, calling for unity - and won plaudits for his troubles.
  • So his friends are bidden 'to clap their hands and shout a loud _plaudite_'. The Life and Works of Friedrich Schiller
  • And even in the capital city, signs of grinding poverty appear to contradict plaudits to the great leader.
  • You get the plaudits when things go well and you take the flak when it doesn't go well. Times, Sunday Times
  • And by the fourth issue of Oz the plaudits were beginning to outnumber the brickbats.
  • Although he finished well behind the rest of the pack, he won plaudits from many and raised millions en route. Times, Sunday Times
  • The plaudits of the great audience which assembled on Monday night at the Grand, as one after another well-known competitor or official were recognised on the screen, were unstinted.
  • Manager Colin Lee has called Paul Merson the ‘biggest signing in the history of Walsall Football Club’ and with four goals in his first four games of the season the former England international seems to be fulfilling that plaudit.
  • He was the one who accepted the plaudits when things were going right. Times, Sunday Times
  • Has won many plaudits for his no-nonsense approach as midfield enforcer. The Sun
  • The film smoothly rides on its success, earning the plaudit of being one of the highest-ever grossers in the Malayalam film industry.
  • It has gained enthusiastic reviews from the critics and happy plaudits from satisfied diners. Times, Sunday Times
  • To her writing was something she loved to do - she never cared whether she won plaudits from critics, she was happy to scribble whenever a story came to her.
  • They'll have so many plaudits - there is sure to be a worldwide plaudit shortage.
  • All the plaudits, all the tributes, will be thoroughly deserved and she will be an extremely hard act to follow.
  • So it is disappointing when one British writer who can stand up to the broad-sweeping visions of international novelists has to watch a writer of more straitened horizons take the plaudits.
  • All the plaudits that came Clarke's way and the ovations of the galleries were richly deserved.
  • As earlier mentioned all the Haldane riders gave everything on the road but an extra wee plaudit should go to Kevin Lynch who, with less than a year's experience as a cyclist, completed his first stage race,
  • he acknowledged the plaudits of the crowd
  • Her technique has earned her many plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • That, dear Ivor, is a wonderful plaudit for what you have achieved.
  • The Qantas crew earned plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • Barbarian Invasions has won plaudits and critical acclaim in Canada and elsewhere.
  • People are angry and the über-rich, noticing this, are seeing pitchforks replacing attaboy plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such brave men and women deserve every plaudit that comes their way though many, sadly, expire, before they can receive them.
  • In his final years, some time was spent modestly accepting the plaudits he richly deserved.
  • _ Cp. the well-known epitaph: -- 'iam mea peracta, mox vestra agetur fabula: valete et plaudite.' The Apologia and Florida of Apuleius of Madaura
  • A second public loo block in the Bradford district - at Ilkley's central car park - has also been given the three-star prestigious plaudit.
  • He deserves all the plaudits he gets as there were a couple of fantastic finishes. The Sun
  • plaudit’; and the low Latin ‘mummia’ (Webster) became ‘mummy’. English Past and Present
  • I’m on a semi-vacation for a couple of weeks and posting lightly or on offbeat topics such such as plaudit abuse that I normally deal with only in the context of book reviews. 2009 July 14 « One-Minute Book Reviews
  • But teasing from team-mates is as much a backhanded plaudit as jeers from opposition supporters, which is why both the ribbing and the heckling have been gathering momentum the older this season gets.
  • Now, 25 years later, its re-release in the original uncut version has passed almost unnoticed by viewers in Melbourne, despite the plaudits of film critics.
  • He deserves all the plaudits but we have it all to do. The Sun
  • We did the research, and we have to admit that kale deserves its plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • Snatching up his dandy-brush and gripping it firmly between his jaws, Jan rushed out into the yard, there to be rewarded with the assurance of Dick's affectionate approval and the enthusiastic plaudits of the other troopers. Jan A Dog and a Romance
  • Sukur, quite rightly, stole the plaudits after his two-goal blast condemned Fulham to their joint-heaviest defeat under Tigana.
  • Then they would care more about justice for the victimized than getting plaudits from the New York Times. The Volokh Conspiracy » Life-Without-Parole Sentence for Under-18 Offender Unconstitutional, When the Crime Is Not Homicide
  • If the trams are a roaring success, then they can receive some plaudits for having the broad-mindedness to let them through even if they had some reservations at the time. Why the SNP have to go with the trams....
  • It was fun for a while, and we had some notable successes, including a plaudit in the Guardian.
  • He had thought that this next six months would see France once more in its rightful place as the natural leader of Europe, handing out this fatcat job here, this little pourboire there, accepting the plaudits from a grateful Eurcracy and European political elite for a job well and truly done. Sarkozy Puts On The Bovver Boots
  • No more of old Tiresias! nunc, spectatores, Iovis summi causa clare plaudite. Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
  • Manager Colin Lee has called Paul Merson the ‘biggest signing in the history of Walsall Football Club’ and with four goals in his first four games of the season the former England international seems to be fulfilling that plaudit.
  • While Martinez got the plaudits she deserved, Navratilova was given the longest standing ovation Centre Court has ever seen.
  • At the back you don't get many plaudits so it's nice to go up front sometimes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Such brave men and women deserve every plaudit that comes their way though many, sadly, expire, before they can receive them.
  • The politicians would be asked to give a refrain of their favourite tunes, while listeners vote on who should take the plaudit of York's finest political voice.
  • The novel deserves nearly every plaudit it has received.
  • On the way, his willingness to surround himself with executives capable of taking his job has won him numerous plaudits. Times, Sunday Times
  • As earlier mentioned all the Haldane riders gave everything on the road but an extra wee plaudit should go to Kevin Lynch who, with less than a year's experience as a cyclist, completed his first stage race,
  • England's form up to now has not earned too many plaudits. The Sun
  • That, dear Ivor, is a wonderful plaudit for what you have achieved.
  • So Bush makes a direct assault on the rich and you will find no plaudits from the MSM or Jeff. Pfffffft « BuzzMachine
  • Whatever time is assigned to each to live, with that he ought to be content; for neither need the drama be performed entire by the actor in order to give satisfaction, provided he be approved in whatever act he may be; nor need the wise man live till the _plaudite_. The Best of the World's Classics, Restricted to prose. Volume II (of X) - Rome
  • Malta were angry that Scotland played on when they had a man down but it wasn't a night to win plaudits for sportsmanship. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was fun for a while, and we had some notable successes, including a plaudit in the Guardian.
  • And before pronouncing the “Vos plaudite!” or, as Easterns more politely say, “I implore that my poor name may be raised aloft on the tongue of praise,” let me invoke the fair field and courteous favour which the Persian poet expected from his readers. The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • He is laughed at, plucked, hustled, and robbed, by those who deafen him with their "plaudits" -- their roars. Beauchamp's Career — Complete
  • He is totally dedicated to others and deserves every plaudit for the work he does.

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