Fame in a sentence as a noun

What he want's most is clearly freedom, and fame was taking that away.

Alas, fame and fortune are quite the deception.

If there is such a thing as a software hall of fame, MSPaint deserves to be in the inaugural class.

Many others were cheated out of the fame and fortune they deserved by others who got the credit.

It should be noted that unlike so many of his tech peers that Woz spent some time as an actual teacher after he achieved his fame and fortune.

But most artist want the international fame that accompanies the major record labels.

I've been watching some talks online recently by Rich Hickey of Clojure fame, and he's a very interesting and convincing speaker.

Successful people put a lot of effort into looking like they are just casually letting the world know about their thing and, behold, great fame and money follows.

Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it.-- Brian Kernighan of "K&R C" and AWK fame

Not because of my "fame".After that, the jobs are pretty uninspiring these days and while the work environment may be pleasant, I rarely find any place that's interested in taking a big risk with my ideas.

Similarly, Rodrigo has risen to fame in open source community despite the fact that he is so inept at communication and teamwork that "you can't get a clear thought out of him without rambling incoherence surrounding it.

Big lumps of money, that seem imaginary to them are dangled in front of their eyes, and they're introduced to former gladiators that have attained fame and glory and were able to buy their freedom, all for the purpose of encouraging the gladiators to fight to the death.

Fame definitions

noun

the state or quality of being widely honored and acclaimed

See also: celebrity renown

noun

favorable public reputation