Advertisement
Advertisement
admirable
[ ad-mer-uh-buhl ]
adjective
- worthy of admiration; inspiring approval, reverence, or affection.
Synonyms: ,
Antonyms: , ,
- excellent; first-rate.
admirable
/ ˈæ»å³¾É™°ùÉ™²úÉ™±ô /
adjective
- deserving or inspiring admiration; excellent
Derived Forms
- ˈ²¹»å³¾¾±°ù²¹²ú±ô²â, adverb
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô±ð·²Ô±ð²õ²õ ²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú¾±±ôi·³Ù²â noun
- ²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô²â adverb
- ²õ³Üp±ð°ù·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô±ð adjective
- super·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô±ð·²Ô±ð²õ²õ noun
- super·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ô·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô±ð adjective
- un·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô±ð·²Ô±ð²õ²õ noun
- un·²¹»åm¾±Â·°ù²¹Â·²ú±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of admirable1
Example Sentences
"They closed ranks, basically, through loyalty to their sister which is admirable and I understand."
The “Common Side Effects†writers go to admirable lengths to explain why a cure-all mushroom could be hazardous; violence would soar, the medicine could fall into the wrong hands, evildoers would never die.
Fans are invited to stand up and dance along, which is equally admirable and hilarious.
The debate between them is handled with admirable complexity, but the characters don’t have enough room to develop beyond the central argument of the play.
But when the movie reaches an admirable capacity with its ideas about parenthood, authoritarianism, mortality and connection, it falters in bringing everything to the reverberating conclusion its discomfiting first two-thirds merits.
Advertisement
Related ˜yÐÄvlogs
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse