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gargantuan
[ gahr-gan-choo-uhn ]
adjective
- gigantic; enormous; colossal:
a gargantuan task.
Synonyms: , , , ,
gargantuan
/ ɡɑːˈɡæԳʊə /
adjective
- sometimes capital huge; enormous
Usage
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of gargantuan1
Example Sentences
The 7-foot-3 center who could become a gargantuan story for his next team is planning to play elsewhere after two seasons as a Bruin.
He said the final "gargantuan" cost would have almost covered the scrapped M4 relief road, and the Welsh public would question if it was worth it.
Changing the gargantuan insurance industry is a daunting task.
The fine has reached such a gargantuan level because - state news agency Tass says - it doubles every day it is not paid.
He theorizes how each could be applied at scale while quantifying how the widespread adoption of such techniques, and minimal shifts in consumer purchasing and consumption habits, could reduce agriculture's gargantuan role in warming.
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More About Gargantuan
What doesgargantuan mean?
Gargantuan means extraordinarily large or huge. Some things are more than huge—they’re gargantuan.
The word is commonly applied to physical objects whose size makes you marvel with awe. Blue whales are gargantuan. Skyscrapers are gargantuan. The Grand Canyon is gargantuan.
But it can also be applied to intangible things, as in With all the champagne and caviar that we ordered, the bill for dinner is going to be gargantuan.
It is especially associated with things involving food, such as a gargantuan appetite or a gargantuan meal.
Similar adjectives are gigantic, giant, colossal, and mammoth. A more formal synonym is massive. More informal synonyms are humongous and ginormous.
Something might be considered gargantuan only in comparison to other similar things. For example, an unusually large grapefruit might be described as gargantuan even though it’s not all that big in general—it’s simply gargantuan compared to normal-sized grapefruits. Still, it’s usually used to describe things that are objectively huge, like redwood trees or the planet Jupiter.
Gargantuan is sometimes casually used to mean extremely important or significant—much like the figurative use of big and huge. Sometimes, this is negative, as in gargantuan error or gargantuan failure.
Example: You don’t realize how gargantuan the sun is until you see an image of a planet next to it for scale.
Where doesgargantuan come from?
The first records of the word gargantuan come from the late 1500s. It comes from Gargantua, the name of a giant king from the 1534 satirical novel Gargantua and Pantagruel by Rabelais. In the novel, Gargantua is known for his gargantuan appetite—hence the word’s association with food. Gargantua’s son, Pantagruel, is also a giant.
Gargantuan is usually reserved for things that are truly, spectacularly huge, or things that exist in amounts that are far greater than what is usual, as in The lottery jackpot is truly gargantuan—it is now over $1 billion.
Did you know ... ?
What are some synonyms for gargantuan?
What are some words that share a root or word element with gargantuan?
What are some words that often get used in discussing gargantuan?
How isgargantuan used in real life?
Gargantuan is especially applied to things involving food. Otherwise, it’s typically used to describe things that are truly massive.
There’s no way this culinary day in could be completed by anyone with a less-than-gargantuan appetite
— Edible Brooklyn (@EdibleBrooklyn)
Foodies Festival comes to Battersea Park this Friday for a gargantuan gastro feast
— Telegraph Luxury (@TelegraphLuxury)
The massive body of a beached blue whale viscerally captivates human curiosity. This meditative film observes spectators as they wonder at the gargantuan carcass. From the Aeon Video archive:
— Aeon+Psyche (@aeonmag)
Try usinggargantuan!
Which of the following words is a synonym of gargantuan?
A. gigantic
B. massive
C. enormous
D. all of the above
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