Synonym: esteemed, honored. Similar words: prestidigitation, religious, vestigial, investigate, investigator, investigation, previous, precious. Meaning: [pre'stɪːdʒəs /-'stɪd-] adj. 1. having an illustrious reputation; respected 2. exerting influence by reason of high status or prestige.
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31. I am a partner in one of Cleveland's oldest and most prestigious law firms.
32. There are even juku to help kids pass entrance exams to get into prestigious juku.
33. As we suggested, this applies even to the largest and most prestigious search firms.
34. Some competitions yield better results than others, particularly worthwhile are environmental projects and also some of the prestigious art competitions.
35. Job Outlook Substantial competition is expected for prestigious jobs as education administrators.
36. But what could be more important than his appointment as chairman of the largest and most prestigious funeral parlour in the city?
37. Next month's prestigious Cheltenham Festival is among meetings facing a possible ban.
38. Holidays had symbolic importance: then, as now, the more prestigious an educational establishment then the shorter its terms.
39. University officials describe the merger as an economic lifeline for the prestigious but financially ailing medical center.
40. And as a result has awarded it top marks and a prestigious regional Quality Brickwork Award.
41. I wanted a coed school, and it seemed the most prestigious.
42. Littlewoods has hired the prestigious Jack Barclay Rolls-Royce showroom in Mayfair for the event.
43. They may have been allowed to attend prestigious colleges and play touch football with the boys.
44. Was it prestigious or trashy to be a disco diva?
45. Though funds are scarce, conservation teams from around the world compete to get in on this important and prestigious project.
46. Friends of Ickes hoped his efforts would earn him a prestigious new post.
47. Last month he received a one-week scholarship to the internationally prestigious Bollettieri Academy in Bradenton, Fla.
48. For that at Olympia, the oldest and most prestigious, it was customary for cities at war to call a truce.
49. The private practice was never very large but it was highly prestigious.
50. The Sainsbury plans have received wholehearted support from borough councillors anxious to attract a prestigious development to the Grange Road site.
51. They opened premises in the most prestigious part of the town. Things were going well, but old habits die hard.
52. Acquavella offers a relationship which is, in some respects, even more prestigious than Kirkman.
53. At the other end of the spectrum, young lawyers joining prestigious firms often have little opportunity to develop close client relationships.
54. His next moves were to acquire a major London publishing house and the prestigious London Times newspaper.
55. Its very proximity however to these two prestigious institutions poses a problem of identity for the new museum.
56. A combinatory method loses some of the prestigious closeness to scientific rigour which a feminist psychology with a conventional method retains.
57. The prizes, the most prestigious awards given for journalism,(Sentence dictionary) are presented annually by Columbia University.
58. She holds several prestigious medals for gaelic football, including a National League medal playing with Kerry.
59. A prestigious teaching post at Winchester had been terminated abruptly some years before, and Hugo had failed to hold another since.
60. Scarlet was enormously prestigious: the thirteenth-century sumptuary laws of the kingdom of Castile and Leon restricted its use to the king.
More similar words: prestidigitation, religious, vestigial, investigate, investigator, investigation, previous, precious, precarious, previously, pretentious, restitution, interesting, overestimate, presumptuous, pretentiousness, stigma, instigate, castigate, rest, pious, forest, wrest, press, testing, testify, question, arrest, rest on, envious.