Laudatory
Laudatory is an adjective meaning expressing praise or commendation; full of praise or intended to praise. It describes language, remarks, or actions that praise someone or something. Etymology: from Latin laudatorius “of praise,” from laudare “to praise.” In modern English, laudatory is commonly used to characterize reviews, endorsements, speeches, or notes that aim to praise. For example, a critic might publish laudatory reviews; a sponsor may offer a laudatory endorsement; a leader may give a laudatory speech.
Distinctions: laudatory versus laudable. Laudable describes something worthy of praise; laudatory describes the act or content
Usage caveats: in journalism and academic writing, excessively laudatory language can signal bias or undermine credibility;