0 to look at with great pleasure and often to express this pleasure -- beundre
1 to have a very high opinion of (something or someone) -- beundre
Members admired the power and simplicity of the construction, the unified arrangement of the design and its ability to command a wide visual field.
As we have seen, he now admired rather different artists to those he had back in 1832.
It is therefore unsurprising that the music press largely ignores teenybopper fans and the artists they admire, as the most obvious inhabitants of this mainstream.
Stirling, the man, was admired by architects as an outspoken, uncompromising figurehead who challenged 'the establishment', both inside and outside architecture.
If one hesitates to accept the methods, concepts, or the conclusions of the author, one cannot help but admire and support his goals.
One cannot but admire the author's courage and stamina.
These were the same qualities admired by brickmakers in the decades after repeal of the tax on bricks.
Thousands admire the sentimental writer; the affectionate father is hardly known in his parish.