lionized

listen to the pronunciation of lionized
English - English
past of lionize
lionize
To visit famous places in order to revere them
lionize
To show the lions or objects of interest to; to conduct about among objects of interest
lionize
To behave as a lion
lionize
li·on·ize lionizes lionizing lionized in BRIT, also use lionise If someone is lionized, they are treated as if they are very important or special by a particular group of people, often when they do not really deserve to be. By the 1920's, he was lionised by literary London The press began to lionize him enthusiastically In 1936, Max Schmeling had been lionised as boxing's great hope. lionise to treat someone as being very important or famous
lionize
{f} treat a person like a celebrity; seek the company of celebrities; (British) visit interesting sites; show sights of a place to (also lionise)
lionize
To treat (a person) as if he were important, or a celebrity
lionize
assign great social importance to; "The film director was celebrated all over Hollywood"; "The tenor was lionized in Vienna"
lionize
To treat or regard as a lion or object of great interest
lionize
assign great social importance to; "The film director was celebrated all over Hollywood"; "The tenor was lionized in Vienna
lionized

    Hyphenation

    li·on·ized

    Turkish pronunciation

    layınayzd

    Pronunciation

    /ˈlīəˌnīzd/ /ˈlaɪəˌnaɪzd/
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