- Personalized Healthcare | Accolade
From provider shortages and care deserts to social determinants of health and disconnected healthcare data, Accolade closes the gaps in the healthcare system so members can get on with their day – and live their healthiest lives
- ACCOLADE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Give credit where credit is due: it's time to celebrate accolade for its centuries of laudatory service Accolade joined English in the 16th century from the Middle French noun acolade, which in turn comes from the verb accoler, meaning "to embrace "
- ACCOLADE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
In a sense it is an accolade to the trustees, the directors and the staffs of the four galleries that are particularly concerned
- ACCOLADE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Accolade definition: any award, honor, or laudatory notice See examples of ACCOLADE used in a sentence
- Accolade - definition of accolade by The Free Dictionary
accolade (ˈækəˌleɪd; ˌækəˈleɪd) n 1 strong praise or approval; acclaim 2 an award or honour
- accolade - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
accolade (third-person singular simple present accolades, present participle accolading, simple past and past participle accoladed) (transitive) To embrace or kiss in salutation
- accolade, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
accolade, n meanings, etymology, pronunciation and more in the Oxford English Dictionary
- ACCOLADE definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
If someone is given an accolade, something is done or said about them which shows how much people admire them The Nobel prize has become the ultimate accolade in the sciences
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