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    • To flatter effusively

      • adulate (third-person singular simple present adulates, present participle adulating, simple past and past participle adulated) To flatter effusively.
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  2. ADULATE definition: 1. to admire or praise someone very much, especially when this is more than is deserved: 2. to…. Learn more.

    • English (US)

      to admire or praise someone very much, especially when this...

  3. Adulate definition: to show excessive admiration or devotion to; flatter or admire servilely.. See examples of ADULATE used in a sentence.

  4. To adulate is to flatter someone. A lot. Like, drop-on-your-knees-and-clasp-your-hands-and-say-"you-are-the-greatest-ever-to-walk-the-earth" a lot. The most interesting syllable in adulate is the ul -, which comes from ulos, a Latin word meaning "tail."

  5. 2 days ago · adulate in American English. (ˈædʒuˌleɪt ; ˈædʒəˌleɪt ) verb transitive Word forms: ˈaduˌlated or ˈaduˌlating. 1. to praise too highly or flatter servilely. 2. to admire intensely or excessively. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

  6. to flatter or praise obsequiously. [...] Conjugations of 'adulate' present simple: I adulate, you adulate [...] past simple: I adulated, you adulated [...] past participle: adulated. More. Synonyms of 'adulate' • deify, worship, praise, flatter [...] • love, adore, treasure, cherish [...] More. Translations of 'adulate' English-Spanish.

  7. ad·u·late. (ăj′ə-lāt′) tr.v. ad·u·lat·ed, ad·u·lat·ing, ad·u·lates. To praise or admire excessively; fawn on. [Back-formation from adulation .] ad′u·la′tor n. ad′u·la·to′ry (-lə-tôr′ē) adj. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

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