Accolade
celebration, applause, praise, commendation
praise
It's a verb. The ending is the tell tale sign. It's the past tense of to contain.
it means to have fun.
Praise
cosine plus use an "oh" ending word followed by the word "sign" e.g. go/no/slow/ sign Trust Me it is real
It's another word for praise. You praise Him for what He is and did.
celebration, applause, praise, commendation
paean - a song of joyful praise
There are many sentences you can use with the word praise. You can praise your children and write about it for example.
Hallelujah is a Hebrew word meaning "praise ye JAH (Jehovah)." In modern parlance, both words mean "praise the Lord" or "praise Jehovah."
Seele. But I think this cantata written by JSB is called "Lobe den Herrn meine Seele" (Praise the lord, my soul and not Praise the lord, his soul)
praise = laus (for example: magna cum laude; with great praise)
Laude is the ablative singular of the Latin word for "praise", laus (laudis, f.). In this form the word means "by, from, or with praise" (which one of these is meant depends on context).
The word 'praise' appears 302 times in the King James version.
Go praise him for his hard work. Don't praise bad behavior or it'll get worse. She smiled at all the praise she was getting.
Laudatory, using the suffix (-tory) common in Latin ''loanwords''; adjectival derivatives of ''agent'' nouns and verbs ending in (-tor).