commend
/kəˈmɛnd/
commend
English
Verb Top 16,397
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Definition
To congratulate or reward.
Etymology
From Middle English commenden, from Old French comender, from Latin commendō (“commend, entrust to, commit, recommend”), from com- + mandō (“to commit, intrust, enjoin”), from manus (“hand”) + dō (“to put”). Doublet of command.
Example Sentences
- "The schoolboy was commended for raising the alarm about the burning building."
- "The new law has little to commend it: it even worsens the legal certainty of the nation."
- "1485 – Thomas Malory. Le Morte Darthur, Book X, Chapter xliiij, leaf 242v Thenne Quene Gueneuer commended hym and soo dyd alle other good knyghtes made moche of hym excepte sire Gawayns bretheren / "Then Queen Guenever commended him, and so did all other good knights make much of him, except Sir Gawaine’s brethren.""
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