Renowned in a sentence as an adjective

Stop emailing me." But, I'm not renowned for my social graces.

Worked fine for them, because they'd be doing it at scale since the 1800s, and had world renowned expertise by the 1900s[2].

However I was renowned for my code quality and my nearly bug free software.

He sold a company he founded, DataProtect, to the renowned TV Rheinland and it turned out to be a scam and crashed.

But, their printer driver and AIO software is renowned in the tech industry for its awfulness.

As context, I am a researcher in datacenter networks at a world renowned university.

Look at DirectX, even; not quite single-GPU-vendor, but hardly renowned for its portability, and popular nonetheless.

And don't kid yourself, if the average Apple employee were as apathetic and unskilled as the average Gap employee, there'd be no way that Apple would be so renowned as a retailer.

I always find it irritating that a world renowned research power house such as UC Berkeley can't even make it into the top 20 ranking, where as schools such as Emory and Vanderbilt are ranked higher.

As another prominent free project with a much better track record for security and stability, consider OpenSSH, the crown jewel of the OpenBSD crowd, a free software distribution itself popularly renowned for its security.

For the vended products, you pay: one cent per gram of sugar, two cents per gram of fat, four cents per gram of saturated fat, one dollar per gram of trans fat...Reminds me of the time I encountered a world renowned nutritional expert...edw519: "I'm having trouble understanding these food labels.

Renowned definitions

adjective

widely known and esteemed; "a famous actor"; "a celebrated musician"; "a famed scientist"; "an illustrious judge"; "a notable historian"; "a renowned painter"

See also: celebrated famed far-famed famous illustrious notable noted