Acclamation in a sentence as a noun

In some weird way the whole story is a pretty big acclamation for the newsletter though.

If we're lucky spectators will judge by popular acclamation which side won or lost.

But humming does bear a striking resemblance to voting by acclamation.

Election by acclamation isn't a contest among the candidates to see who can shout the loudest.

My own personal anecdote asking a few people about it is closer to unicorn puke than acclamation.

It is a noble endeavor to become incensed about a cause and risk arrest or toil without acclamation for one’s deeply held beliefs.

My problem with this blog is that she wants stress the fact that she is a girl developer like she should get some acclamation for that fact..a developer is a developer!

Pubblic acclamation doesn't necessarily mean you have accomplished something good.

"Truly this is the argument that shall be the first ever to result in the win-by-acclamation that so many have fantasized about online, yet never experienced.

On the subject of "dumb problems" and undeserved acclamation:One day I walked into the break room and observed one of the dev team leaders pissing on about how the vending machine didn't have the snack he wanted.

Along the way, many other institutions implemented it - for example, pirate ships were often democracies, with the captain chosen by popular acclamation.

My say-very-quietly-around-nationalists opinion is that the alphabet has become the fourth major writing system used in modern Japanese, via popular acclamation.

I absolutely agree that there are things the HN gestalt won't like about Trump, like protectionism and closing the borders, so acclamation is not on the table, but on the other hand, there are also absolutely things the HN gestalt will like such as opposition to TPP, and probably having a significantly higher chance of getting the Feds out of ********* enforcement than you would have seen under Clinton.

Acclamation definitions

noun

enthusiastic approval; "the book met with modest acclaim"; "he acknowledged the plaudits of the crowd"; "they gave him more eclat than he really deserved"

See also: acclaim plaudits plaudit eclat