English to Spanish Dictionary commemorated

commemorated

Conmemorado
definition
verb
a wreath-laying ceremony to commemorate the war dead
recall and show respect for (someone or something) in a ceremony.
translation of 'commemorated'
verb
conmemorar
example
Having mourned their dead, 'commemorated' their martyrs and heroes, all the peoples of Europe, including the Germans, recovered from their wounds, rebuilt their shattered cities.
The memorial 'commemorated' 43-year-old Ray Salmon, of Nelson, a biker who was killed in an accident on Sunday August 3.
In 1902 Martha Washington became the first American woman to be 'commemorated' by a U.S. postage stamp.
I danced into the morning to celebrate the coming-of-age of young men and fell asleep in a dark hut while marriages and deaths were 'commemorated' in song.
She has dealt with countless compensation claims from sufferers and their loved ones, including many of the Railway Works staff 'commemorated' by the Swindon Disease memorial garden in Queen's Park.
The fight for independence during the past century is 'commemorated' throughout the land by war memorials and museums displaying what are now known as the remnants of war.
Halfway down the hill Hector Pieterson was shot and fell, on 16 June, and the spot is now 'commemorated' with a stark stone memorial to the 12-year-old boy.
Small wonder that many ex-Servicemen who survived the conflicts which claimed the lives of those 'commemorated' on memorials such as this despair of what has become of the country they fought to protect.
On Good Friday, continental Europeans 'commemorate' that Christ was crucified and died to absolve our sins and give us eternal salvation.
The town's cenotaph will be re-dedicated and a new memorial plaque 'commemorating' those who have died since July 1945 will be unveiled.
All of this is in sight of a plaque that 'commemorates' 10 years of my dad's labor.
On old Navy ships, built with teak decks, the first sailors to report to new ships received planks of deck wood to 'commemorate' their being part of the first crew to serve on the ship.
It was planted earlier this year by the National Memorial Arboretum, a charity which plants trees to 'commemorate' Britain's war dead.
How does the government intend to 'commemorate' the war dead in the future?
More than 4,000 petals were dropped at a ceremony to 'commemorate' police officers killed in the line of duty.
World leaders and thousands of people are 'commemorating' a grim anniversary today.
He showed me the memorial wall in the synagogue 'commemorating' all those Jews who have been killed in the area.
Opposite the airport a memorial plaque 'commemorates' Uemura's two extraordinary expeditions.
Two hundred people are being invited to a reception at the town hall, where Prince Charles will unveil a stone 'commemorating' the town's celebrations.
From April 8 people will be able to opt for a civic ceremony tailored to 'commemorate' the life and times of their loved ones.
He was awarded the Trinity Cross in 1978, his portrait adorned two postage stamps and six calypso songs were penned to 'commemorate' his triumph.
Huge monuments 'commemorating' the war were commissioned, the most well-known being a metal sculpture forming an arch out of swords held in two hands, the latter cast from molds taken from the president's own wrists.
Youngsters have recited poetry to 'commemorate' a century of war.
I have laid a wreath at the Cenotaph in Belfast to 'commemorate' the British war dead.
Gabriel Fawcett investigates how the Germans 'commemorate' the losses they sustained in the First and Second World Wars.
The Menin Gate Memorial 'commemorates' more than 70,000 British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in there during World War One and have no known grave.
Together with many of his old comrades and his wife, Stella, Peter will be at a ceremony in Westminster to 'commemorate' the anniversary of the battle.
The ceremony is held annually to 'commemorate' the lives of all Irish people who have died in past wars or while on service with the United Nations.
In the following weeks the people would watch as a tall memorial was built to 'commemorate' those who had died.
In subsequent years, the hour and day was set aside to 'commemorate' the war dead of the Allied nations.
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