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8 Sentences With "more laudatory"

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

The U.S. government has a long and proud history with technology — what could be more laudatory than helping invent the backbone of the internet?
WASHINGTON — Years before the words "collusion" and "Russian hacking" became associated with President Vladimir V. Putin, some prominent Republicans found far more laudatory ways to talk about the Russian leader.
" Pamela Buckles, a co-owner of Rumor, was even more laudatory, calling her "loving, sweet and heartfelt — and it's wonderful to have a German shepherd as an icon, as she should be.
The Times, January 19, 1967. A more laudatory assessment The New York Times described the work as a "rigidly Freudian" but nonetheless "valuable and perceptive mining operation in Victoriana".Elizabeth Janeyway, "Two Faces of an Era", New York Times, August 4, 1966.
Schlenker p. 5. On completion of the Montreal series, the Globe and Mail said of the 19-year-old Kennedy, "Ted Kennedy's all-round display was the best individual performance of the six-game set." The Toronto Star was even more laudatory "There are a few great hockey players in the N.H.L. today. Kennedy is assuredly and emphatically one." Kennedy said that the 1945 upset of the Canadiens was the peak event of his career.
Similarly, regardless of the particular merits of individual emperors, founders would be portrayed in more laudatory terms, and the last ruler of a dynasty would always be castigated as depraved and unworthy, even when that was not the case. Such a narrative was employed after the fall of the empire, by those compiling the history of the Qing and by those who justified the attempted restorations of the imperial system by Yuan Shikai and Zhang Xun.
10 He returned to England by way of the US, where he presented Paddy the Next Best Thing in New York. Alexander Woollcott in The New York Times was no more laudatory than his critical counterpart in London, but the play ran well.Woolcott, Alexander. "The Play – An importation from London", The New York Times, 28 August 1920 In the 1920s Courtneidge returned to producing British provincial tours, including the old-fashioned Gabrielle (1921; composed by George Clutsam, Archibald Joyce and others), which was successful for several years.
Although he admitted that there are moments of accuracy and truth in the film, he found these "excruciating", and discerned a "pictorial slickness" in the production's use of the CinemaScope process and its filming in the widescreen format, a slickness he declared was at odds with the realism of Ray's directing. Crowther was not impressed by James Dean's acting, and cited the various mannerisms he believed Dean copied from Marlon Brando, asserting that "Never have we seen a performer so clearly follow another's style" and calling Dean's interpretation of the Jim Stark role a "clumsy display". Reviewer Jack Moffitt of The Hollywood Reporter, who correctly thought the film would be a money maker, wrote a less critical, more laudatory review. He found the acting of James Dean, Natalie Wood, and Sal Mineo to be "extraordinarily good", and the direction by Nicholas Ray to be "outstanding".

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