Nehru eulogized him and lionized him as a great secularist and anti-feudal. |
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As Toronto theatre critics dispense increasingly disparate opinions, some shows are savaged in one rag and lionized in another. |
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During a visit to Britain in 1886 he was lionized with genuine enthusiasm and affection. |
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When his early results seemed to find positive effects for school integration, he was lionized by the profession. |
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Londoners were proud to host Haydn, one of the most esteemed musicians in all Europe, and they feted, even lionized him on a grand scale. |
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Cai luong stars are lionized, and the best troupes maintain high artistic standards. |
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President John F. Kennedy, lionized by today's supply-siders for his 1963 tax cut, first proposed closing the deferral loophole 40 years ago, when it was a far smaller drain. |
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Chaucer, who came of London merchant stock, grew up in aristocratic and royal circles, and he was one of the most lionized and richly rewarded poets of any age. |
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For a man who was often lionized on the right, Sharon had a tin ear on economics. |
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And like Mailer, Amis was at first lionized by the media, then caricatured, and then vilified. |
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The police themselves do little to dispel or discourage this lionized portrayal. |
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He was lionized by aristocratic and literary London, survived a hectic love affair with Lady Caroline Lamb, and became the constant companion of Augusta. |
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In 1778, after an absence of 28 years, he made a triumphal return to Paris, where he was lionized for four months in a way few writers can ever have experienced. |
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And the same who had lionized him began to criticize and attack on all fronts. |
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Today, Caetano Veloso is lionized as the Recôncavo's greatest son. |
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Yet, while Lehmann was lionized in psychiatric circles for supposed dedication to his patients, investigation reveals that several of them suffered horrific deaths during his experiments. |
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A virtuoso acclaimed by the international press and an impassioned communicator, Alain Lefèvre remains one of the most lionized personalities on Québec's classical scene, but at the same time one of the most eclectic. |
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Max, lionized at last in spite of himself, forgave us our homage because of our affection, cackled happily at the kisses of the ladies and grinned broadly at the jovial congratulations of his friends. |
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In death Morrison was lionized by generations of fans, both as a youth icon and as an influence on singers such as Iggy Pop, Echo and the Bunnymen's Ian McCulloch, and Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder. |
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Chavan became lionized as the architect of modern Maharashtra for the range of the economic and social policies initiated during his tenure as chief minister, and the respectful suffix saheb was often attached to his name. |
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Flare-riding is one of the most exotic and exhilarating sports in existence, and those who can dare and afford to do it are amongst the most lionized men in the Galaxy. |
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And he is lionized in bien-pensant circles in Western Europe and North America, almost as a secular saint in the mold of a Vaclav Havel or a Desmond Tutu. |
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She was lionized everywhere after her novel won the Pulitzer Prize. |
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