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Synonyms

exalt

American  
[ig-zawlt] / ɪgˈzɔlt /

verb (used with object)

  1. to raise in rank, honor, power, character, quality, etc.; elevate.

    He was exalted to the position of president.

    Synonyms:
    ennoble, raise, dignify, promote
    Antonyms:
    humble
  2. to praise; extol.

    to exalt someone to the skies.

    Synonyms:
    glorify
    Antonyms:
    depreciate
  3. to stimulate, as the imagination.

    The lyrics of Shakespeare exalted the audience.

  4. to intensify, as a color.

    complementary colors exalt each other.

  5. Obsolete. to elate, as with pride or joy.


exalt British  
/ ɪɡˈzɔːlt /

verb

  1. to raise or elevate in rank, position, dignity, etc

  2. to praise highly; glorify; extol

  3. to stimulate the mind or imagination of; excite

  4. to increase the intensity of (a colour, etc)

  5. to fill with joy or delight; elate

  6. obsolete to lift up physically

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Usage

Exalt is sometimes wrongly used where exult is meant: he was exulting (not exalting ) in his win earlier that day

Related Words

See elevate.

Other Word Forms

  • exalter noun
  • self-exalting adjective
  • superexalt verb (used with object)
  • unexalting adjective

Etymology

Origin of exalt

First recorded in 1375–1425; late Middle English exalten, from Latin exaltāre “to lift up,” from ex- ex- 1 + alt(us) “high” + -āre, infinitive verb ending

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

She was an artful, innovative interpreter of other people’s songs, in the vein of Frank Sinatra, in an era when audiences—and especially critics—were exalting the singer-songwriter model instead.

From The Wall Street Journal

So to be holding that space and then to also be in this creator space that people respect and exalt in some sort of way is crazy to me.

From Los Angeles Times

“Now he’s king of the universe and has been moving in pretty exalted circles. How does he cope in that world?”

From Los Angeles Times

And the discussion between Frank’s buildings and music was on an exalted level.

From Los Angeles Times

This level of self-regard in a writer and thinker as justifiably exalted as Smith may explain why our nation is turning on reading: aristocracies breed resentment among the proles.

From Los Angeles Times