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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;

of
praising.
Related
terms
include
laudation
(an
act
or
speech
of
praise)
and
laudability
(the
quality
of
deserving
praise).
Synonyms
include
commendatory,
eulogistic,
and
encomiastic;
antonyms
include
critical,
disparaging,
and
deprecatory.
objective
assessment
is
preferred
even
when
praise
is
warranted.
In
rhetoric,
laudatory
language
can
serve
to
honor
individuals,
institutions,
or
achievements
and
may
be
stylistically
appropriate
in
ceremonies
and
testimonials.
It
remains
a
standard
descriptor
in
literary
criticism,
public
speeches,
and
endorsements
where
the
author
or
speaker
seeks
to
praise
or
commend.