exalted

بلند
definition
verb
the party will continue to exalt its hero
hold (someone or something) in very high regard; think or speak very highly of.
adjective
it had taken her years of hard infighting to reach her present exalted rank
(of a person or their rank or status) placed at a high or powerful level; held in high regard.
I felt exalted and newly alive
in a state of extreme happiness.
example
Yet Cocteau made ‘the noblest and most 'exalted' claims’ for poets, and the poet's immortality is very special and real.
It remains, indeed, a sublime mystery that Bach's 'exalted' creative ideals appear to have been so little constrained by the limited means at his disposal.
This article explores how Head used Romantic notions that 'exalted' primitivism and the ‘noble savage’ to justify this plan.
Hindus regard death as a most 'exalted' human experience, the migration of the soul from one dimension of consciousness to another, a transition we have all experienced many times.
My own new position was much less 'exalted' , a manager in audit research.
And as the 24-year-old Russian prepares for her last world gymnastics championships and Olympics, she's embracing her 'exalted' status as if this was what she was born to do.
That accolade was the final confirmation of Dragila's metamorphosis from quirky outsider to 'exalted' global personality.
She was traveling with her parents to the Philippines, where her father - a colonel (an 'exalted' rank in the old army) - was to take command of a regiment on Corregidor.
That will give her access to all Cabinet decisions and files, and an 'exalted' status in the Government.
He poured his heart out in soaring songs of praise, in searing prayers, in sublime thanksgiving, in words infinitely more 'exalted' than any I could conjure up.
Each successive building operation took place to house the remains of an 'exalted' person, whose burial place was constructed in the top of the pyramid.
Suozzi had already dazzled me a few times at City Ballet, and I'm certain we'll be seeing more of him there, and at a more 'exalted' level than his current corps newbie position.
The list, thankfully, is getting longer, and their positions are becoming more 'exalted' .
What could be responsible for the incredible evolutionary sprint that brought our species to its present 'exalted' but precarious position?
This is quite scary, and made more so by the fact that doctors, with their 'exalted' status, find it hard to admit that there is a problem.
In fact, he argued that it was because of this 'exalted' nature that the arts, and culture more generally, could guide the nation in its path toward development.
They felt numb, stunned, but a feeling of 'exalted' happiness was rushing through their souls.
The work ends by reinforcing humankind's 'exalted' nature.
Thus instead of being useless or morally questionable, leisure becomes an 'exalted' ideal, akin to virtue.
But reunification, an unprecedented experiment in social and political reclamation, was bound to fall short of the 'exalted' German ideal of national solidarity.
An 'exalted' call rang out joyfully, overpowering Griffith's next words and catching the Dawns' attentions.
Even Popes must die for, despite their 'exalted' status, they are all mortal just like the rest of us.
His Masonic music has a distinctive tone, solemn yet 'exalted' and often joyous.
Of course another possibility is that Pangle does not view philosophy as noble at all - and that he merely employs an 'exalted' rhetoric to attract people, and especially young people, to the study of it.
Not needing other people is 'exalted' as a virtue.
Now its cast of characters seems less 'exalted' and therefore less interesting.
These 'exalted' personages never seem to tire of a joke however often it is repeated.
In saluting his life of violence, exile and running, there is the satisfaction of heroism and human grandeur, an athletic and aesthetic pleasure, something 'exalted' and defiant about his refusal to serve.
He would have slain the dragon, and slaying the dragon would bestow upon him 'exalted' status.
He has a far too 'exalted' estimation of human reason and far too optimistic a view of human nature.
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