different between laudatory vs appreciative
laudatory
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin laudatorius: compare Old French laudatoire.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?l??d?t?i/
Adjective
laudatory (comparative more laudatory, superlative most laudatory)
- Of or pertaining to praise, or the expression of praise.
- laudatory verses
- 1853, Sir James Stephen, "On Desultory and Systematic Reading"
- The comparison of these two passages will probably have suggested to you the fact of the immense superiority of the satirical over the laudatory powers of Dryden.
Translations
Related terms
- laudatories
Anagrams
- adulatory
laudatory From the web:
- laudatory meaning
- what does laudatory mean
- what are laudatory lines
- what does laudatory
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appreciative
English
Etymology
appreciate +? -ive
Adjective
appreciative (comparative more appreciative, superlative most appreciative)
- Showing appreciation or gratitude.
- Capable of showing appreciation.
Translations
appreciative From the web:
- what appreciative means
- what appreciative inquiry
- what's appreciative listening
- what appreciative in french
- what's appreciative in spanish
- what appreciative comprehension
- appreciative what does this mean
- what is appreciative inquiry approach
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