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well-reviewed

[wel-ri-vyood]

adjective

  1. having received positive reviews or opinions, such as from critics or customers.



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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.

“Going to school is super important — I tell that to the young cooks we have,” said Trade-Tech culinary graduate Katya Shastova, the chef-partner of Vin Folk, a well-reviewed Hermosa Beach restaurant that opened last year.

In 1944, Black producer, director and entrepreneur Leon Norman Hefflin Sr., staged a production of the popular and well-reviewed musical “Sweet ‘N Hot,” which starred Black film and stage icon Dorothy Dandridge.

And, it offered the groundlings at home the chance to see a much-discussed, well-reviewed production only a relatively few were able to see in person — which I applaud on principal and enjoyed in practice — and which will very probably not come again, not counting the next day’s final performance.

The academy’s snub of VW’s well-reviewed “Only God Was Above Us” might mean that St. Vincent’s path is now clear — or that voters are determined to shake things up.

His emergence from the pack of Democratic hopefuls was helped by the release of his well-reviewed autobiography “Why Not the Best?” in which he described his upbringing on the farm and his traditional moral values.

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well-respectedwell-rounded