Laudatorem
Laudatorem is the accusative singular form of the Latin noun laudator, meaning "praiser" or "one who praises." The base verb is laudare, "to praise," and the agent-noun suffix -tor yields laudator, "praiser." Laudatorem therefore denotes the direct object in Latin clauses in which a praiser or the act of praising is described.
Morphology: Laudator is masculine noun of the third declension. Singular: nominative laudator, genitive laudatoris, dative laudatori,
Usage: In classical and medieval Latin, laudatorem typically functions as the object of verbs such as laudare
Related terms: laudatio (a praise, eulogy), laudabilis (praiseworthy). See also Latin grammar entries on third-declension masculine