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Definition of acclaim verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

acclaim

verb
 
/əˈkleɪm/
 
/əˈkleɪm/
[usually passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they acclaim
 
/əˈkleɪm/
 
/əˈkleɪm/
he / she / it acclaims
 
/əˈkleɪmz/
 
/əˈkleɪmz/
past simple acclaimed
 
/əˈkleɪmd/
 
/əˈkleɪmd/
past participle acclaimed
 
/əˈkleɪmd/
 
/əˈkleɪmd/
-ing form acclaiming
 
/əˈkleɪmɪŋ/
 
/əˈkleɪmɪŋ/
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  1. to praise or welcome somebody/something publicly
    • be acclaimed (as something) The work was acclaimed as a masterpiece.
    • This book has been widely acclaimed as a modern classic.
    • a highly/widely acclaimed performance
    • Mario Vargas Llosa, the internationally acclaimed novelist
    Topics Successc2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryphrases
    • be critically acclaimed
    • be highly acclaimed
    • be internationally acclaimed
    See full entry
    Word Originearly 17th cent. (in the sense ‘express approval’): from Latin acclamare, from ad- ‘to’ + clamare ‘to shout’. The change in the ending was due to association with claim. Current senses date from the 17th cent.
See acclaim in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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