A sycophant is a person who uses excessive flattery to try to gain favor from someone; also called an apple polisher, bootlicker, or brown-noser in slang.
A mean flatterer; a toadeater; a sycophant., A coarse, rustic woman., To fawn upon with mean sycophancy.
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Excessive praise or admiration can be described as "over-the-top" or "exaggerated." It may also be referred to as flattery or sycophancy.
No: His advisors said he was so mighty that he could command the waves, on putting the theory to the test their sycophancy was shown for what it was !
The advantage of reward power is that it is easier to implement change. The disadvantage is that it encourages sycophancy which might not translate to quality work.
Political hysteria is referred to exaggerated emotions or excitement that is triggered by political activities among a group of people. This can be referred to sycophancy of political events.
A word that means fake or excessive kindness is "sycophancy." It refers to behavior that is overly flattering or ingratiating, often aimed at gaining favor or advantage. Another term is "insincerity," which highlights a lack of genuine feelings behind the kind gestures. Both terms convey the idea of superficial or exaggerated kindness.
The term "kowtow" originates from the Chinese phrase "kòu tóu" (叩头), which means to "knock the head." It historically referred to a ritual of bowing deeply to show respect, often involving touching the forehead to the ground, and was commonly practiced in imperial China, especially when addressing the emperor. The concept has evolved in Western usage to describe excessive subservience or sycophancy.
Father and mother, eldest daughter and aged grandmother, are briefly described as assuming the guises of persons of their ages who are filled with great contentment. and The Ambitious Guest is "frank-hearted" who sycophancy the family to have what he wants.
False statements are lies. If you say the lies orally, it is slander. If you write the lies, it is libel.
John Oscar Lofberg has written: 'Sycophancy in Athens' -- subject(s): Administration of Justice, Capital punishment, Chicanery (Law), Social life and customs
It mean what you don't what does it mean.