All aesthetic expression has a poetic quality and is essentially eulogistic. |
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She never gave an interview but her homely face with its everlasting smile was worth any number of eulogistic words. |
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This concert gets a warm feed back from the public and the medias, who draw up an eulogistic article on her performance. |
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In the same year, Hallam published a eulogistic article on Poems, Chiefly Lyrical in The Englishman's Magazine. |
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The somewhat eulogistic dedication of the Horologium Oscillatorium to Louis XIV brought to a head murmurs against Huygens at a time when France was at war with Holland, but in spite of this he continued to reside in Paris. |
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It deals with the struggle for independence in an eulogistic way. |
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Perfectionist, she puts her designing talents to profit and makes original uniforms that arouses eulogistic critics thanks to their style and elegance. |
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Brown died 10 days after her accident, and to the consternation of her private secretary, Sir Henry Ponsonby, Victoria began work on a eulogistic biography of Brown. |
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Gentle or simple, man or woman, never came in for flattery at his hand, and hence his criticism of Lady Charlotte's work is worth pages of eulogistic comment. |
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Descriptive words can be dyslogistic, eulogistic, or neutral. |
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