Medal in a sentence as a noun

He won IOI gold medal twice and was studying at MIT back then.

Ackman should be given a medal for what he's doing to this snake-oil selling pyramid scheme.

If you won an Olympic gold medal and can also write hello world in Ruby, we want to hear about the former, not the latter.

They deserve some kind of medal for that, by the way, because I have no dog in this fight at all and I can't seem to shut up about the unfairness of it all.

Other sports still have medals for each category but cycling went away from it due to not enough athletes per category.

Everybody has their 1600 SAT or Ivy League degree or IMO gold medal or past startup or open-source project, and so you can't measure yourself by your accomplishments.

The guy who wrote the initial pull request should get some sort of medal for efficiency in trolling, it's not common that you can make this many alleged professionals look like idiots with a 3 character patch.

If this were the olympics of mental gymnastics, you would take the gold medal in every category.> So, here's the story: He is expecting a number at around 100 miles because he thinks he's being more efficient now.

As another poster points out, I suppose the real answer is to voice recognition software start the clock on "allez".Lastly, I just wanted to salute Shin's courage and dignity in coming on to play the bronze match, even though she must have known she had no chance to win the medal.

>What are they gonna do when every govt/corporate website starts sanitizing its webapps' input and patching its network services?If that actually happens as a direct result of lulzsec, I submit that they should be given some sort of medal, and their choice of pacific islands.

Medal definitions

noun

an award for winning a championship or commemorating some other event

See also: decoration medallion palm ribbon