0 a speech or piece of writing that praises someone very much and does not mention anything bad about them: --
She delivered a panegyric on the president-elect.
I remember the panegyrics we heard about the desirability of having a drink with a meal.
The thorough and attentive contemplation of it will furnish its best panegyric.
If all those unsolicited panegyrics applied in 1982 and 1983, why do they not apply now?
It was, surely, a panegyric of free enterprise, praise for the managements.
He started with a great panegyric on democratic planning.
The auctioneer began with the usual panegyric, no doubt, that it had seldom fallen to his lot to offer such good and such central property.
The portraits and panegyric co-exist with gossip and rumour, especially around female monarchs, whose sexuality seems to be of intense interest to their subjects and historians alike.
Both the panegyric and the wine poem are concerned with self-transcendence, the liberation from fate and nature, from the constraint and suffering of quotidian existence.