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Congratulates

Congratulates is the third-person singular present tense of the verb congratulate. To congratulate someone is to express praise and good wishes to them for an achievement, milestone, or fortunate event.

Etymology: The word derives from Latin congratulārī, formed with con- "together" and grat- "pleasing" (from gratus).

Usage: As a transitive verb, it takes a direct object: "She congratulates her teammate on the win."

In culture: Offering congratulations is a standard social courtesy across many societies, expressed in person, by

See also: felicitate; congratulate (the base form); congratulation (noun); congratulatory (adjective); congratulations (plural noun).

It
entered
English
via
Old
French,
giving
rise
to
the
noun
congratulations
and
the
adjective
congratulatory.
Common
constructions
include
"congratulate
someone
on
(a)
something"
and
"to
congratulate
someone
for
(an
achievement)."
The
simple
past
is
congratulated,
and
the
present
participle
is
congratulating.
card,
or
online.
The
tone
ranges
from
warm
and
informal
to
formal,
depending
on
relationship
and
context.