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"exalt" Definitions
  1. exalt somebody (to something) to make somebody rise to a higher rank or position, sometimes to one that they do not deserve
  2. exalt somebody/something to praise somebody/something very much

109 Sentences With "exalt"

How to use exalt in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "exalt" and check conjugation/comparative form for "exalt". Mastering all the usages of "exalt" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The drawings exalt Willie's experience to the level of religious myth.
BEN BRANTLEY Mr. Castellucci's cryptic shows exalt rather than frustrate audiences.
So I think it's important that we exalt in one another's difference.
Trump's analysis of people and situations hinges on whether they exalt him.
Yet Haddish is hardly the first person to exalt the benefits of turpentine.
" One moment, Fox said, "they might desire to exalt me onto a pedestal.
I watched them and dreamed of my own fame and art and exalt.
This gives the Exalt record a dynamic that was unfamiliar to most listeners before.
He takes to social media to lash out at detractors and exalt his brilliance.
To exalt protectionism is to risk a return to a world of barriers and confrontation.
So, don't exalt the Neon Advance or any number of related hardware mods beyond their due.
Football is a beautifully violent game, which is the reason Americans simultaneously exalt and fear the sport.
Movements created to protect national interests and exalt national identities tend to make awkward bedfellows, after all.
Modern Republicans exalt "job creators," that is, people who own businesses directly or indirectly via their stockholdings.
Because that stuff tends to exalt themselves to a degree that it&aposs unheard of in human history.
Exalt vocalist Tyler and guitarist Ben talked about the evolution of the band and their new album below.
The Exalt is expected to carry a price tag of approximately $3,000, and insurance coverage is still uncertain.
" Bakker: "God, will you send your flesh and blood again on Earth so that we can exalt him?
Even Packer calls it an "unjust" agreement, and he can't quite exalt it, as much as he wants to.
Science fiction tends to exalt technology as the solution to all of our problems, but we are the solution.
But he invokes free speech to exalt cruel behavior and lewd testimonials whose purpose is headlines and booking fees.
The Exalt includes a 1,470mAh battery, a 5-megapixel rear-facing camera (sorry no selfie cam), and 8GB of memory.
"To Exalt the Ephemeral: Alina Szapocznikow, 1962-1972," at Hauser & Wirth in Manhattan, will not be a show to miss.
It is easy to look at the throngs who support and exalt this man and be discouraged, but don't be.
To Exalt the Ephemeral: Alina Szapocznikow, 1962-1972 continues at Hauser & Wirth (32 East 69th Street, Manhattan) through December 21.
You click on a gossip thing and it's like I can just either kind of exalt or denigrate someone else.
To such an extent did these poets exalt alcohol that it has arguably been the image most associated with Persian poetry.
How can you exalt La Pira and at the same time close the convent that was so fundamental to La Pira?
Even so, we can all agree that something must be done to exalt the interests of the American public in politics.
I've learned that the best way to make dinner on nights like that is to exalt in the glories of simple tastes.
Called the LG Exalt LTE, it only connects to Verizon's 4G LTE network — that means no 3G network option for phone calls.
Exalt does this balancing act through the album, seemingly pacing themselves before continuing to unleash their now extremely polished and shady metal.
The Shape You Took Before The Ache was not a conventional Exalt record, What has pushed you guys to expand your repertoire?
These latter-day laconophiles (lovers of Sparta, that is) tend to exalt the cruellest, grittiest, and most violent aspects of Spartan life.
He wanted to make sure that I had his motivations straight—that his goal was to exalt Richter, not to diminish him.
The new device, called Exalt and made by Boston Scientific, is designed to be used only once before being discarded or recycled.
A version of this story was first published in 2010 (CNN)Appreciate the apostrophe, salute the semicolon and exalt the exclamation point today.
But it would be irresponsible to exalt this technology without pointing to the very real threat it poses to victims of manipulated videos.
Their bone crunching yet minimalistic tones make Exalt a band that'll not only define their genre but bring new elements to the table.
The enduring appeal of that form lies in its ability to exalt the everyday by endowing it with the pattern of rhythmic song.
A privilege of location (usually urban), of education (exposure to other cultures and locales), and of parentage (who would introduce and exalt other tastes).
However within the barrage of beating metal that The Shape You Took Before The Ache gives, Exalt surprisingly gives listeners songs to breathe in.
Narcissists exalt in a glorious past, denigrate a miserable present and promise a magnificent future—a rollercoaster U-curve, with today in its pit.
"We exalt and revere the presidency in this country—yet even so, I think we grossly underestimate how difficult the job is," he wrote.
Americans exalt leaders who, in the face of a particular moral crisis, have unequivocally left the world a better place for the next generation.
Whether they went on to have great triumphs or profound defeats, these photographic images exalt the actions of these people, be they violent or caretaking.
His stories, fiction and nonfiction alike, exalt the innate dignity inherent in cowardice and failure, in loserdom, in life at the bottom of the barrel.
Sometimes "La Mélancolie des dragons" excites the desire for showier, more imperative effects, a transcendent moment that will exalt or resolve what has come before.
In fact, a cursory view of our workforce, as well as our expansive, multicultural customer base, is a reliable indicator that we exalt and appreciate diversity.
Even hard-line conservatives who exalt the military questioned its competence and what they called the deliberate decisions by senior military officials to misinform the public.
You have, in other words, appropriated the experience of a subordinate group, liquidating her actual experience to capitalize on your own privilege and exalt your own reputation.
Flags, he wrote in one of his 27 vexillological books, "are employed to honour and dishonour, warn and encourage, threaten and promise, exalt and condemn, commemorate and deny".
However, it smells of horrendous hypocrisy to exalt one's admiration of a given political office, while overtly impugning the legitimacy of the person assuming the very same office.
Civic nationalists, from places like Brazil, America and Australia that are largely made up of immigrants, exalt universal values and the example their nation sets in pursuing them.
Another part of me, though, is done with it, with the imperialist ambitions of economics and its tendency to explain away differences, to ignore culture, to exalt reductionism.
Works that he made in New York and, at the time, showed only privately exalt sex, drugs, and rock and roll—delirium aplenty, yet managed with acute aesthetic intelligence.
We also hope to adopt its particular blend of critical nostalgia—HLD knows where it came from, but it doesn't settle for the past or exalt it as untouchable.
I remember the Obamas appearing on a video feed at the Tony Awards to introduce and exalt "Hamilton," and thinking: We are living in the golden age of theater.
And while it's notable how many women participated in Surrealism, albeit on the sidelines, the movement was sexist even as it pretended to exalt women and encourage their liberation.
Akerman's fixed, contemplative frames exalt the treasures of intimate experience and folklore that largely vanished with the murder of European Jewry but that survive, in fragments, in these women's memories.
Female musicians today credit that generation for putting women in the center of samba, and the groups exalt them by including the sambas those women composed in their regular repertoires.
We all talked very heavily about musical direction and bringing in influences from other places of the musical spectrum, separate from hardcore or metal, while trying to also play Exalt songs.
For those who exalt in the extraordinary success of the Democrats in winning the House majority this time, a note of sobriety: The party needs to avoid repeating that earlier outcome.
But the Pope only uses the word populist in a narrow connotation, to refer to right-wing movements that exalt ethnic nationalism while portraying immigrants and elites as hostile alien forces.
Thus, when Republicans exalt these terms in general or in defense of their next nominee, know that this is very likely what they mean: It's about political outcomes, not the Constitution.
The photo was indeed of Salads wearing a Nazi armband, not to exalt Adolf Hitler per se, but for the equally stupid purpose of trying to prove Donald Trump's supporters aren't racists.
Critic's Notebook Often in the posthumous rush to exalt dearly departed cultural icons, sweeping claims are made for creative influences they are said to have exerted, assertions not always supported by fact.
Emerging from the ordeal as a fine physical specimen, he took pride in his strength, and for the rest of his life would exalt strength in nations as well as in men.
A cursory view of our workforce, and our expansive, multi-cultural Customer base whose loyalism brings them back to Southwest is an endorsement and reliable indicator that we exalt, appreciate and celebrate diversity.
As we exalt the amount of antioxidants in beet green pesto, we widen the gulf between those who have much and those who haven't been exposed to or can't access or afford broccoli.
If anything, respectability politics are a form of victim-blaming that hold the marginalized accountable for the ill treatment they receive rather than institutional forms of oppression that devalue some people and exalt others.
Instead, the Indo-Canadian director's gaze — that by his own admission was influenced by and based on the personal inputs by the investigating officers — thrives to invariably exalt the Delhi Police as misunderstood heroes.
That's why they tend to exalt policy and demean "politics," which takes place on the messier terrain where most of us live: in our desires, our resentments, sometimes our prejudices, and, yes, our feelings.
While most of those interviewed seem to have found a middle ground, there's still a deep anti-Semitism in the country, as well as, surprisingly, philo-Semitism, in which some Germans exalt Jewish culture.
Ignoring and degrading Caroline is an easy shortcut to that goal, because in the moral universe of Sixteen Candles, the more you degrade one girl — the whore — the more you can exalt the virgin.
In Concrete Economics, Stephen S. Cohen and J. Bradford DeLong exalt Alexander Hamilton as the architect of the booming industrial economy that took off in America in the second part of the nineteenth century.
By transforming a biological entity of unfathomable complexity into a small set of numbers, it enables science that was not previously possible; at the same time, it creates the temptation to exalt those numbers.
Spanning still lifes of medieval torture instruments and portraits of contemporary human rights abuse victims, Serrano's four dozen photos formally exalt systematized savagery, asking the gaze to linger a while longer on repulsive subject matter.
We, through politics, exalt the petty, domineering spirit of the small man so afraid to look in the mirror that he attempts to distract himself by obsessing over the perceived faults and flaws of others.
He was a strange man who made occasionally impressive, predominantly weird, sometimes god-awful art in thrall to a programmatic sense of mission: to exalt rural America in a manner adapted from Flemish Old Masters.
Thunderous video montages and "Top 10 Tight Ends" specials will exalt football's history with one clear, though unspoken, message: The appeal and profitability of today's N.F.L. derives as much from its past as its present.
When their husbands filled their wunderkammers, or cabinets of curiosities, with treasures they had looted conquistadoring around the world, wealthy European women created bittersweet tableaux that seemed to exalt their domestic power while accentuating its limits.
Instead of synthesizing these disparate elements into things tidy and deliverable, however, felted ceramic totems (his Once upon a time there were human beings series) and the aforementioned steel sculptures ( We Have Agency) exalt their differences.
JR's installation, however, dissolves one monument to exalt another: it is not an impervious barrel vault unto the heavens, but the replacement of arguably the second most photographed monument in Paris with the stately palace behind it.
Whether Hollywood histories chronicle the exploits of brave gladiators, courageous soldiers or noble civilians, they almost always exalt the past in a similar cinematic register, with soaring speeches, swelling strings, sweeping montages, thrilling fights and breathless romances.
The video (whose English title is Travel Diary in Poland: Freedom of Fine Arts in Poland Where Zhdanov Is not Polish) is included in Szapocznikow's current exhibition, To Exalt the Ephemeral: Alina Szapocznikow, 1962-1972, at Hauser & Wirth.
Because, hey, if taxpayers have to pay out the ass for these monstrosities that host, like, 20 events a year, they should at least exalt in the glory of the bird and the human pursuit of the sky and stars, right?
The piece that opens the exhibition "To Exalt the Ephemeral: Alina Szapocznikow, 1962-1972," Hauser & Wirth's thorough and enthralling first show of the artist's work since beginning to represent her estate last year, is an untitled plaster cast of her mouth.
At the same time, there's a nagging sense that the cooperation and/or sanction of those portrayed tends to soften the rough edges, or at the very least, exalt their status within the musical world to even more extraordinary heights.
That's a lot of buzzwords for technology that to date is hardly flawless—tech companies love to exalt their proprietary algorithms as a saving grace for many an issue, but we have yet to see one deployed without at least some error.
The constitutions of Tunisia, Algeria and other countries in the region may exalt freedom of conscience and of religious choice, but in Algeria, to take one example, a woman's decision to marry a non-Muslim is still subject to ferociously dissuasive constraints.
While there is a case for Trieu to legitimately exalt Adrian Veidt — his mass destruction of humanity could be read as a necessary and selfless act by some less-empathetic types — I find Angela's defense of Judd Crawford to be more begrudging.
Not likely, according to "Thin Blue Lie: The Failure of High-Tech Policing," Matt Stroud's incisive, muckraking exposé of the "police industrial complex" — the web of law enforcement agencies, for-profit corporations and politicians who increasingly exalt technology as the way to reform American policing.
Franklin understood, though, that the energies deployed to exalt a Higher Power could also heal a broken heart, revel in romance, celebrate the simple pleasure of being alive and, as she asserted in the 1967 single that announced her superstardom to the world, demand respect.
A. Riots: Thin Veneer of Civilization" and "Media's Romance With Rodney King Continues in Death," it's surprising to see Mr. Bannon's screenplay exalt black gang leaders like Coriolanus who battle the police: "A black thing for the little black girl and the homie Rodney King.
Far be it from me to tell Chris Christie what he should do with the rest of his life; his whole life is a catalog of the things he would punish to further exalt himself, and we should not assume that he's done with that work.
However, non-attendance does not magically exonerate Kempe and his colleagues for choosing to exalt a dictator who, along with his father, has harshly ruled Gabon and siphoned off so much of the country's natural resource wealth that he has become the poster boy for African corruption.
A current show at Sperone Westwater of some of his last works, with a few early gems thrown in, won't exalt his reputation, but its antic perversity—with flatly painted, surreal tableaux, wizardly in composition, of toy medieval knights on fabric-armored horses—is well worth witnessing.
"We can understand that in the heat of desire for relations between China and the Vatican one can be doting and exalt Chinese culture ... but adulating China is an ideological affirmation that makes a laughingstock of the Church," Cervellera wrote in an editorial headlined "Sanchez Sorondo in Wonderland".
From the raw and bare bones record of their first record Breach False Minds in 2012, to 2014 when they released Pale Light, and The Shape You Took Before The Ache in 2016, Exalt has taken their time to hone in on their strengths and refine their sound.
While sportswriters and fans inevitably exalt the player's dominance and measure them against the greatest players in history, those same sportswriters and fans also exhibit an antsy urge to find the next greatest player: the up-and-comer who can challenge — and even beat — the sport's current leader.
Trump saw the immense potential appeal of an American restoration — all nationalism finds its roots in a gloried, mythical past — after the presidency of a black man, Barack Obama, who prudently chose not to exalt the exceptional nature of the United States but to face the reality of diminished power.
" As Mr. Mazzu says in the second episode, "Our students need a place to express themselves, laugh, cry, exalt in joy, and most of all to dream, to dream big, to discover the greatness within them, because in my heart I do believe that everyone of these kids has greatness inside them.
As the Communist Party of China prepares to celebrate the 241th anniversary of its rule, the state is choreographing the pomp and pageantry to exalt President Xi as the unassailable leader of a rising nation and the indispensable bulwark against an array of challenges that threaten to erode its iron grip on power.
"As president, I swear upon my honor and integrity, before the great Turkish nation and history, to work with all my power to protect and exalt the glory and honor of the Republic of Turkey and fulfill the duties I have taken on with impartiality," Erdogan said in a ceremony at the parliament in Ankara, which was broadcast live on television.
"The decision of a federal judge in the District of Columbia enjoining President Trump's executive order on transgenderism in the military is absolutely ridiculous and is a perfect example of the outlandish doctrine of judicial supremacy whereby judges exalt themselves over the Constitution they are sworn to uphold," Moore, a former state Supreme Court chief justice, said in a statement on Monday.
When I was 17, that made him easy to love and exalt because he handed us a romantic idea of what masculinity and warriorism looked like: Self-sacrifice, mission before man, victory at all costs — these were the slogans that effortlessly built the ranks of American ground-combat units and made it easy for our leaders to send young men and women to war.
We exalt our culinary ancestors Emeline Jones, Aunt Sukey, James Hemings, Thomas Dorsey, Pierre Augustin, Perrine, Hercules, Nat Fuller, Tom Tully, Aunt Lucy, Abby Fisher, Malinda Russell, Rufus Estes, Uncle Emmanuel, and my great great great grandmother Jane Lewis and my great great grandfather Elijah Mitchell, not only because they passed on to us precious parts of African civilization that were nearly lost, but because they had command of the cuisine of the master class and then used their skill in the kitchen to master them.
We will not be complacent and silent in the face of another fixed fight, we won't sit idly by while you turn basketball into wrestling without the violence, a series of ups and down meant to exalt the star and denigrate the noble role player, the Trevor Arizas, the Jordan Crawfords (Exiled from the league, toiling in Grand Rapids, all for the crime of dunking on NBA golden boy LeBron James...) the Ivan Johnsons... You think we wouldn't find this picture of you "taking a selfie" with the former Secretary of Defense, Ash Carter, and his wife, whose name is also, presumably, Ash, which is a sassy and brassy shortening of Ashley!?

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