What is another word for extols?

Pronunciation: [ɛkstˈə͡ʊlz] (IPA)

The word extols means to praise or to speak highly of someone or something. There are many synonyms for this word which can be used depending on the context in which it is being used. Some common synonyms for extols are lauds, compliments, glorifies, applauds, adulates, eulogizes, honors, commemorates, celebrates, and commends. Each of these words carries a slightly different connotation and can be used to convey a different kind of praise. For example, lauds may be used to express religious or spiritual praise, while compliments may be more casual. Regardless of the synonym used, extols remains a powerful word to convey admiration and reverence.

What are the paraphrases for Extols?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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What are the hypernyms for Extols?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Extols

Shan Tien of late extols your art, claiming that in every circumstance you have a story fitted to the need.
"Kai Lung's Golden Hours"
Ernest Bramah Commentator: Hilaire Belloc
The virtuous woman portrayed by King Lemuel was still the ideal in the time of Christ: "Her sons rise up and praise her; her husband also extols her."
"Women of Early Christianity Woman: In all ages and in all countries, Vol. 3 (of 10)"
Alfred Brittain Mitchell Carroll
Kingo extols Christ as the risen, victorious Saviour-the Sun that breaks through the dark shades of sin and death.
"The Story of Our Hymns"
Ernest Edwin Ryden

Famous quotes with Extols

  • In a culture whose media extols thinness as the great panacea that will bring happiness, sexuality, self-respect and social acceptance, they are blind to the insidious lies of the false goddess. Possessed by their own damaged instincts, and ironically driven by the same desire for power that their parents used in raising them, some children wolf down food, or reject it, or vomit it out. Whether that rejection of life is concretized in 200 pounds of armor, or 90 pounds of bone, or vomit in the toilet, the surest way out of the neurosis is to try to understand what food symbolizes in the individual psyche and why the energy is pulled in that direction.
    Marion Woodman
  • I'm reading a very quaint American book, , written, I'd suppose, by a sectarian minister, presumably of Methodist dye. (Norman Vincent Peale)..He's full of stories of prayers heard - and extols the power of prayer.."Before leaving for an important business conference I brace myself with texts like 'If God be for us, who can be against us?'...Then I stalk into the conference room, sure of my victory, and carry off the most marvellous deal.." This, in essence is the burden of the whole book. That's what people call Christian optimism. But it's wasted on us - we've been spoilt for this sort of thing...But isn't it rather self suggestion than authentic religious impulse? It doesn't seem to have dawned on him that suffering, disappointment, defeat or loss might also have some point too, or that God's designs could sometimes be hidden...
    Ida Friederike Görres

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