Honored in a sentence as an adjective

"We’re honored to have Dr. Rice join our board"Mozilla's was apologetic.

Metal music and martial arts are time-honored hobbies for nerds.

In traditional societies, motherhood is not looked down upon or held in contempt, but mothers are honored.

Everything being said by the people who worked with him indicates that they feel humbled and honored by the experience.

You have to wonder why they spent money listing it at all; and, since the auction was essentially abandoned, whether they would've honored a sale if someone had offered the asking price.

I said that I did, that I was honored, and that owing to my age and situation I didn't think I could promise him that I would reside in Japan continuously until my retirement.

What a time we live in when asking for your constitutional rights is too much to ask..."...would return voluntarily to the US if there were "ironclad assurances that his constitutional rights would be honored".

This really resonates with me: "Mozilla is dedicated to offering users privacy and transparency and we are honored to be an organization that users trust.

Killing a bill with unpopular amendments is indeed a time-honored tradition in legislatures everywhere.

If enough Stanfords emerge across the world, suddenly the time-honored value of the Harvard degree seems less shiny than it once was.[Interestingly enough, Harvard does a pretty darned good job at being a Stanford, too.

They think that we should feel honored for the opportunity to work on their legacy Java in-house apps that have been ravaged by years of turnover, failed projects, arbitrary management requirements, low quality devs, and outsourcing.

I was berated for how much time and money was wasted on getting me ready for employment, and I replied I was promised repeatedly that I would not have to sign away my rights, and this was absolutely a deal breaker and I didn't appreciate being told repeatedly this would be honored until the very last minute.

This would be reprehensible - even if that employee isn't really adding $5M worth of value, if they are performing up to the expectations that were set when they were hired then the agreement should be honored - getting a chance of a huge upside is one of the reasons employees take lower salaries and work longer hours at startups in the first place.

Honored definitions

adjective

having an illustrious reputation; respected; "our esteemed leader"; "a prestigious author"

See also: esteemed prestigious