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Word Meanings - SUPERPRAISE - Book Publishers vocabulary database

To praise to excess. To vow, and swear, and superpraise my parts. Shak.

Related words: (words related to SUPERPRAISE)

  • PRAISEWORTHINESS
    The quality or state of being praiseworthy.
  • SWEARER
    1. One who swears; one who calls God to witness for the truth of his declaration. 2. A profane person; one who uses profane language. Then the liars and swearers are fools. Shak.
  • PRAISER
    1. One who praises. "Praisers of men." Sir P. Sidney. 2. An appraiser; a valuator. Sir T. North.
  • SUPERPRAISE
    To praise to excess. To vow, and swear, and superpraise my parts. Shak.
  • PRAISEMENT
    Appraisement.
  • PRAISELESS
    Without praise or approbation.
  • EXCESS
    out, loss of self-possession, fr. excedere, excessum, to go out, go 1. The state of surpassing or going beyond limits; the being of a measure beyond sufficiency, necessity, or duty; that which exceeds what is usual or prover; immoderateness;
  • EXCESSIVE
    Characterized by, or exhibiting, excess; overmuch. Excessive grief the enemy to the living. Shak. Syn. -- Undue; exorbitant; extreme; overmuch; enormous; immoderate; monstrous; intemperate; unreasonable. See Enormous --Ex*cess*ive*ly,
  • PRAISEWORTHILY
    In a praiseworthy manner. Spenser.
  • PRAISE
    fr. pretium price. See Price, n., and cf. Appreciate, Praise, n., 1. To commend; to applaud; to express approbation of; to laud; -- applied to a person or his acts. "I praise well thy wit." Chaucer. Let her own works praise her in the gates. Prov.
  • SWEARING
    from Swear, v. Idle swearing is a cursedness. Chaucer.
  • PRAISE-MEETING
    A religious service mainly in song.
  • PRAISEFUL
    Praiseworthy.
  • SWEAR
    To give evidence on oath; as, to swear to the truth of a statement; he swore against the prisoner. 3. To make an appeal to God in an irreverant manner; to use the name of God or sacred things profanely; to call upon God in imprecation; to curse.
  • PRAISEWORTHY
    Worthy of praise or applause; commendable; as, praiseworthy action; he was praiseworthy. Arbuthnot.
  • APPRAISER
    One who appraises; esp., a person appointed and sworn to estimate and fix the value of goods or estates.
  • MAINSWEAR
    To swear falsely. Blount.
  • FORSWEARER
    One who rejects of renounces upon oath; one who swears a false oath.
  • OVERPRAISE
    To praise excessively or unduly.
  • MISWEAR
    To wear ill. Bacon.
  • APPRAISE
    1. To set a value; to estimate the worth of, particularly by persons appointed for the purpose; as, to appraise goods and chattels. 2. To estimate; to conjecture. Enoch . . . appraised his weight. Tennyson. 3. To praise; to commend. R. Browning.
  • FORSWEAR
    1. To reject or renounce upon oath; hence, to renounce earnestly, determinedly, or with protestations. I . . . do forswear her. Shak. 2. To deny upon oath. Like innocence, and as serenely bold As truth, how loudly he forswears thy gold! Dryden.
  • DISPRAISER
    One who blames or dispraises.
  • APPRAISEMENT
    The act of setting the value; valuation by an appraiser; estimation of worth.
  • UNDERPRAISE
    To praise below desert.

 

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