0 very admiring of someone and representing the person as perfect or much better than they really are:
The biography has been criticized for being too hagiographic.
Weinraub takes a hagiographic approach, portraying him as a historical hero first and a human being second.
The book is a largely hagiographic account of the former President and his supposed strengths.
The show opens with a video collage of Mr. Durst's television appearances that's uncomfortably hagiographic.
In what must be the least hagiographic obituary ever published, Pratt is described as an "unabashed snob and social interloper on a grand scale".
Other than an outburst of official and hagiographic works in the early years after his death, only a couple of works substantially treat his career.
All of this liturgical and musical restructuring occurred in conjunction with a translation of relics, an architectural building site and even a hagiographic ' building site'.
In addition to sermons, she uses different genres of hagiographic material, chronicles, archival material, wall paintings and manuscript illuminations.
I shall offer no apology for the hagiographic overtones of the preceding two paragraphs of this review.
The relationship between individual and persona is considerably more integrated than that between representation (literary, artistic, mythological, hagiographic) and reality.