Cherished in a sentence as an adjective

Those are some of my most cherished memories from childhood, and became the foundation of my career over a decade later.

The idea that Americans are crying out for some kind of radical centrist is much cherished by technocrats, but is completely false.

Not only that, but we're even seeing an opposite trend where people are now actually starting to tear down and attack the principles of Unix that were once so cherished.

At last he entered the room, and from a lively expression in his countenance I observed in a moment that the great object of my long cherished ambition had been attained!

I've cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities.

It is funny how this paper like the writings of Dijkstra is widely cherished, while its attitude and conclusions simultaneously are completely ignored.

Curious about how many other cool projects / companies can come out of that line of thought:"Here's a plain everyday thing that everyone wants to ignore, let's make it a cherished item"

Free $3000 laptop, random games, free food, free apartment etc. However, I think the thing that I cherished the most were the people themselves, they were committed to their mission of making the web a better place.

I don't remember the details of the conversation, but I remember a compliment he gave me -- to this day, one of my most cherished:"I know you'll do fine: you've burnt yourself on soldering irons.

"The obstacle we shall have to overcome, if we are to successfully program manycore systems, is our cherished assumption that we write programs that always get the exactly right answers.

It would be 'corporatizing our cherished community institutions' or something.

A substantial amount of what people call "corruption" in American politics is instead two cherished principles of American society being fundamentally at odds as a result of our representative system.

The type of economic inequality that successful startups yield, and which accounts for a lot of the entries in the Forbes 400, is described merely as a theory cherished by the rich, and dismissed with evidence it would be a compliment to call anecdotal.

However, when you have an object of that age in your hand, and you really consider its age, how many other people have cherished it for their lifetime, and that it will probably exist long after I am forgotten, you realize that you're really just the next temporary caretaker.

"Well, since we're having a merry old time stomping all over the Constitution, I suppose asking what ramifications could possibly befall this Representative, considering the "Speech and Debate" immunity provided under Article 1, Section 6 of our allegedly-cherished Constitution, is a moot point.

But what I very intentionally did in bringing up my children was plan to give them support so that whatever differences they have with other people in their childhood environments--whether height, weight, hair color, low IQ, high IQ, physical weakness, athletic prowess, or whatever it would be--they would still be cherished as our children.

Cherished definitions

adjective

characterized by feeling or showing fond affection for; "a cherished friend"; "children are precious"; "a treasured heirloom"; "so good to feel wanted"

See also: precious treasured wanted