What's the difference between adulation and adulatory?

Adulation


Definition:

  • (n.) Servile flattery; praise in excess, or beyond what is merited.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Riva, the oldest nominee ever for best actress category, has a very Gallic disdain for such public adulation.
  • (2) Customers at her plush boutique in central Cairo are offered a choice between chocolates coated with his face and others embossed with messages of adulation.
  • (3) It gave the occasion the feel of a testimonial, although some players warrant such adulation.
  • (4) Feminists, myself included, focused on the killer’s misogyny, his furious sense that women owed him something, that he had a right to whatever pleasure and adulation they could deliver.
  • (5) And in both introducing and summing up the debate, she along with many of her political peers currently receiving all the public adulation of the childcatcher from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang spoke more intelligently, authoritatively and compassionately about mental health than I've heard from many a professional.
  • (6) Did he heed the global outpouring of adulation that elevated Mandela, who died aged 95 last December, to virtual sainthood?In that moment, did the president of Zimbabwe reflect on his own legacy and the cold judgment of history?
  • (7) Mohammed Samy's message was a succinct model of blind adulation: "Fairouz is my life."
  • (8) We softened up over the years, we have to stop being pussies.” When the Guardian also informs him about Trump’s plan to ban foreign Muslims entering the country, he says: “Sounds good to me.” Two sides to every coin But such signs that Trump is consolidating his advantage, that the more outrageous his pronouncements become the more his followers adulate him, tell only half the story.
  • (9) All issues of sentiment, underdoggery and fairytale glee aside, it is an achievement that deserves at least a slice of the adulation being lavished on the champions-elect.
  • (10) The hit prompted an outpouring of adulation for the Yankees captain, from press and public, and also a rash of conspiracy theories considering the pitch delivered by the Oriole’s Evan Meek.
  • (11) It’s like ‘not a third Bush, not a second Clinton’.” By forming the new group, Sagrans is aiming to harness some of this raw adulation towards a more professionalised outfit that can appeal to Democrats who pull some strings in national politics.
  • (12) Another avalanche of adulation is about to asphyxiate us; with glossy supplements on “The Greatest Reign”, exhibitions in royal palaces selling souvenir albums, and Douglas Hurd’s gushing biography, Elizabeth II: The Steadfast .
  • (13) And, if one is not at the zenith of adulation of the Pacific islanders who believe the Prince to be the penis-gourd-sporting Melanesian Messiah, then, at the very least, the example of Britain's longest-serving monarchal consort is deserving of our – and, more specifically, the Duchess of Cambridge's – interest.
  • (14) And yet the very craving for adulation, the need to chalk up successes, the deep, even cynical, pragmatism also predicted that Trump would have no stomach for Bannon’s reign of terror.
  • (15) Like a Mao in miniature, he seemed both to enjoy and have contempt for the adulation that surrounded him.
  • (16) He was greeted with adulation and reverence by Barack Obama, a joint session of Congress, the United Nations general assembly and, finally, the city of brotherly love.
  • (17) And I don’t believe that he could have coped with the adulation of fans for very long.
  • (18) The adulation in Kosovo is all the more striking for the contrast to its object's reputation in his home country, where, following the invasion of Iraq, the Blair name is a brand so toxic the Labour party goes out of its way to avoid him.
  • (19) The rapper – who performed to screaming adulation with Alicia Keys – became the most successful solo artist in the history of the US Billboard chart, after his 11th album, Blueprint 3, went to number one, surpassing Elvis Presley's record.
  • (20) And how will Aung San Suu Kyi, who has repeatedly said she detests being described as a saint or an icon, cope with the adulation she will receive this week?

Adulatory


Definition:

  • (a.) Containing excessive praise or compliment; servilely praising; flattering; as, an adulatory address.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Lawrence, this year's best actress Oscar-winner thanks to her scene-stealing turn in David O Russell's Silver Linings Playbook, received an adulatory write-up from fellow actor Jodie Foster.
  • (2) In some quarters, the reception has been so adulatory that you could have been fooled into thinking that he had won himself a place alongside Abraham Lincoln in the pantheon of great orators and the Gettysburg Address now had a rival in the Bloomberg Speech.
  • (3) Suharto's adulatory biographer, OG Roeder, records in The Smiling General (1969) his subject was "well known for his tough, but not brutal, methods".
  • (4) For them, the Texan senator’s adulatory words were as hard to swallow as they were for liberals mindful of the Republican party’s historic record in this area.
  • (5) He was the subject of films, cartoons and at least one rock song, by Scritti Politi; he generated both adulatory and vituperative journalism; and he wrote some of the most formidably difficult philosophical works of his time.
  • (6) The first trailer for Downfall director Oliver Hirschbiegel's Princess Diana biopic has hit the web, hinting at an adulatory portrait of the figure it dubs "the most famous woman in the world".
  • (7) Alongside came more popular works of exegesis - a Historical Association pamphlet on Cromwell (1958), the bestselling (but not adulatory) biography God's Englishman (1970), the textbook The Century Of Revolution (1961) and the hugely successful Penguin economic history, Reformation To Industrial Revolution (1967).
  • (8) It is a testament to how conservative the US entertainment industry has become about abortion in the past quarter-century that Obvious Child has been greeted with such adulatory relief by pro-choice audiences.
  • (9) They have both performed impressively in meeting the public, who have turned out in large and adulatory numbers, and engaging those they have met in more than perfunctory conversations.
  • (10) Suharto's adulatory biographer, OG Roeder, records in The Smiling General (1969) that his subject was "well known for his tough, but not brutal, methods".
  • (11) During the first two days of their tour in Ottawa, the royal couple have been greeted by huge and adulatory crowds.

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