Laud in a sentence as a verb

You laud and describe the exact mindset that caused this.

TechCrunch wrote two short posts about the launch event and didn't laud or criticize the S3.

If it were anyone else but RMS who did that, HN would laud it as the pinnacle of hacker excellence.

Before I laud SAP's efforts to hire those with autism, I'd like to hear what their compensation model is like.

Having to use at least twice the processing power to get the same result isn't something to laud, for example.

We laud competition, while in actuality we beat it down with ever fewer but larger and more deadly sticks.

It seems hypocritical to laud fragmentation when it happens in iOS and decry it in Android.

Every time I see someone laud ddg's !bang searches, I ask myself, "What makes managing your browser's configuration so damn hard?

So let us laud them for their efforts and consideration, and properly direct any ire toward the MIT administration where it belongs.

When rich people give society back the money they stole, in exchange for improving their personal connections and reputations, we're supposed to laud them because "it's for charity".

It seems like a pretty reasonable article trying to bring awareness to how some of the things we laud thoughtlessly can be used as tools against us or others and actually not further our ideals.

While many laud the benefits of self-expression from, say, high school students being able to wear what they want, what about the consequences in terms of decision fatigue?High school is stressful for most people.

I laud the researchers who are coming up with new paradigms and extending current paradigms, but we really need researchers going behind and finding what's beneficial and what's not in terms of human factors.

Everyone knows of Turing - no doubt related to the tragic nature of his death due to disgusting treatment and the ubiquity of his eponymous machine - but not as many know of or laud this person whose influence is at least as great.

Yahoo gets insulted and asked to go away for suing Facebook, while Apple repeatedly attempts to prevent Samsung from being able to sell devices because of some very flimsy patent objections and people laud them as creative geniuses.

Grandiosity can be a sign of personality disorders or, if you ask me, it can be a sign of hanging out with people who exhibit grandiosity, tell you it's what you have to have to achieve what you want, who laud you for having it, and who mysteriously aren't there to help you when you fall on your ***.

Laud definitions

verb

praise, glorify, or honor; "extol the virtues of one's children"; "glorify one's spouse's cooking"

See also: extol exalt glorify proclaim