Celebrate in a sentence as a verb

Don't celebrate until the cash is in the bank.

I want to suffer with them during the day and celebrate with them over beers at night.

Well, she found out she got the one she really wanted and so that night we went out to a nice dinner to celebrate.

We should applaud and celebrate this, not knock down how he's not a senior developer yet.

It felt like free food was on offer at least once a week, usually with a pretense of some small milestone to celebrate.

When he said "not attempt to summaraize...Now is a time for..." I expected the sentence to end with "now is the time to grieve and celebrate Aaron's life, not cast blame"...Certainly, the same message and promises won't be made by the government handlers.

I suspect that's not the author's intention -- he's setting out to celebrate the homeless, not to denigrate them -- but some of his language lends itself to misinterpretation.

[It] sends a very clear message when citizens celebrate a rare victory in denying the Government a power it seeks - the power to shut down websites without a trial - only for the Government to turn around the very next day and shut down one of the world’s largest and best-known sites.

School sports, especially the big, spectator friendly, fast-twitch muscle oriented sports of football, basketball, and baseball, send a big message to the student body:Athletic achievement is something that should be celebrated by all students, to the degree that it should be celebrated by the peers of the students on the field/court.

Celebrate definitions

verb

behave as expected during of holidays or rites; "Keep the commandments"; "celebrate Christmas"; "Observe Yom Kippur"

See also: observe keep

verb

have a celebration; "They were feting the patriarch of the family"; "After the exam, the students were celebrating"

See also: fete

verb

assign great social importance to; "The film director was celebrated all over Hollywood"; "The tenor was lionized in Vienna"

See also: lionize lionise