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High standing
Answer for the clue "High standing ", 8 letters:
prestige
Alternative clues for the word prestige
Word definitions for prestige in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a high standing achieved through success or influence or wealth etc.; "he wanted to achieve power and prestige" [syn: prestigiousness ]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Prestige is the sixth studio album and eleventh overall by Puerto Rican reggaeton singer-songwriter Daddy Yankee . It was released through El Cartel Records and Sony Music on September 11, 2012. The album currently has three singles, the lead " Ven Conmigo ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context obsolete English) delusion; illusion; trick. 2 The quality of how good the reputation of something or someone is, how favourably something or someone is regarded.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1650s, "trick," from French prestige (16c.) "deceit, imposture, illusion" (in Modern French, "illusion, magic, glamour"), from Latin praestigium "delusion, illusion" (see prestigious ). Derogatory until 19c.; sense of "dazzling influence" first applied ...
Usage examples of prestige.
Party after the repeal of the antisocialist laws in 1890 lent it immense prestige in the eyes of socialists abroad.
For a time even her immense prestige as a dancer suffered some eclipse, but this, with a performer of her supreme artistry, was bound to be only a passing phase.
Ending the supremacy of Tara would be a blow to Meath prestige, but they would rather see it fall into final decay than revert into the hands of Munstermen.
On the Moon, where the surface is pelted with micrometeors and bathed in hard radiation, prestige and expense increase with your distance downward.
I made no attempt to explain to him the economics of galactic commerce, planetary prestige, or the multifold levels of intercommunication.
From this overlordship of the bachelors there had gradually risen a system of fagging, such as is or was practised in the great English public schools--enforced services exacted from the younger lads--which at the time Myles came to Devlen had, in the five or six years it had been in practice, grown to be an absolute though unwritten law of the body--a law supported by all the prestige of long-continued usage.
He was going to try to serialize the whole thing in his column, and then sell it as a prestige project at one of the studios.
The Samoans preferred self-government, and Solf, lacking sufficient coercive means, could defeat them only by practising the same political shrewdness and guile as the Samoans themselves, dealing with them in accordance with Samoan concepts of power, pride and prestige rather than with German ones.
The prestige of Queen Eleanor suffered in the general distrust of transmarine ties.
Cornwallis had long since left Halifax, and Lawrence, the English governor, while loyal to a fault, was, like Braddock, that type of English understrapper who has wrought such irreparable injury to English prestige purely from lack of sympathetic insight with colonial conditions.
Mara had secured more prestige for the Acoma than they had known in their long, honourable history.
His successor in prestige, though not his serious rival, was Ali Ben el-Abbas, usually spoken of in medical literature as Ali Abbas, a distinguished Arabian physician who died near the end of the tenth century.
Ben was presenting a major research project from the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, with all the prestige that automatically conferred.
Races of prestige and high prizes were printed in heavy black type in auction catalogues: black print earned by a broodmare upped the price of her foals by thousands.
The wealth and prestige of the Californio had long since disappeared, but the pride and beautiful dark eyes had survived.