commendatory
71Abbey of St. Victor, Marseille — For the abbey near Paris see Abbey of St. Victor, Paris Fortified tower of the Abbey of St. Victor …
72Mondaye Abbey — Monastery information Order Premonstratensian Established 1200 …
73favorable — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. auspicious, propitious, advantageous, opportune, commendatory, well inclined; affirmative. See occasion, aid. Ant., unfavorable, disadvantageous. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Winning favor] Syn.… …
74laudatory — I (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. flattering, approving, eulogistic; see complimentary . II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) a. commendatory, praising, approving, eulogizing, complimentary, favorable, acclamatory, flattering. ANT.: condemning, critical III… …
75Approbation — (Roget s Thesaurus) < N PARAG:Approbation >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 approbation approbation Sgm: N 1 approval approval approvement Sgm: N 1 sanction sanction advocacy Sgm: N 1 nod of approbation nod of approbation Sgm: N 1 esteem …
76supreme — adj Supreme, superlative, transcendent, surpassing, preeminent, peerless, incomparable can all mean highest in a scale of values. All of these words may be interchangeable when used rhetorically or bombastically with the resulting loss in… …
77dimissorial — |dimə|sōrēəl, sȯr noun ( s) Etymology: New Latin dimissorialis dimissory and commendatory, from Medieval Latin dimissorius dimissory and commendatory + Latin alis al : a letter from a pope, bishop, abbot, or other high ecclesiastical official… …
78VAEZ, ABRAHAM — (d. 1694?), French Sephardi rabbi. Vaez was the earliest known ḥazzan and ḥakham of the Nefuẓot Yehudah community formed by ex Marranos at Bayonne and is probably to be identified with the R. Abraham Davan (a misreading of Da Vaez) who died there …
79Approbatory — Ap pro*ba to*ry, a. Containing or expressing approbation; commendatory. Sheldon. [1913 Webster] …
80Dyslogistic — Dys lo*gis tic, a. [Gr. dys ill, bad, + ? discourse, fr. ? to speak.] Unfavorable; not commendatory; opposed to {eulogistic}. [1913 Webster] There is no course of conduct for which dyslogistic or eulogistic epithets may be found. J. F. Stephen.… …