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View synonyms for

grandiose

[ gran-dee-ohs, gran-dee-ohs ]

adjective

  1. affectedly grand or important; pompous:

    grandiose words.

    Synonyms: , , , , ,

  2. more complicated or elaborate than necessary; overblown:

    a grandiose scheme.

  3. grand in an imposing or impressive way.
  4. Psychiatry. having an exaggerated belief in one's importance, sometimes reaching delusional proportions, and occurring as a common symptom of mental illnesses, as manic disorder.


grandiose

/ ˌɡrændɪˈɒsɪtɪ; ˈɡrændɪˌəʊs /

adjective

  1. pretentiously grand or stately
  2. imposing in conception or execution
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Derived Forms

  • grandiosity, noun
  • ˈԻ徱ˌDz, adverb
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Other yvlog Forms

  • ·徱·Dz· adverb
  • ·徱·Dz·Ա ·徱·Dz··ٲ [gran-dee-, os, -i-tee], noun
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yvlog History and Origins

Origin of grandiose1

First recorded in 1830–40; from French, from Italian grandioso, from Latin grandi(s) “grand” + -ōܲ adjective suffix ( -ose 1 )
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yvlog History and Origins

Origin of grandiose1

C19: from French, from Italian grandioso, from grande great; see grand
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Synonym Study

Grandiose, showy, ostentatious, pretentious all refer to conspicuous outward display, either designed to attract attention or likely to do so. Grandiose and showy are alike in that they may suggest impressiveness that is not objectionable: the grandiose sweep of the arch; a fresh bouquet of showy zinnias. Grandiose, however, most often implies inflation or exaggeration to the point of absurdity: grandiose, impractical plans; a ridiculously grandiose manner. Showy sometimes suggests a meretricious gaudiness or flashiness: a showy taste in dress. Ostentatious, which refers to behavior or manner clearly designed to impress, also has negative connotations: an ostentatious display of wealth; an assumption of superiority too ostentatious to be ignored. Pretentious, like the preceding term, is always derogatory, implying falseness or exaggeration in claims made or implied: natural and straightforward, not pretentious; pretentious language designed to mask the absence of real content.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

“I’m beginning to think I was put here to tell a bigger truth. Our truth,” they narrate in one of their more grandiose moments.

From

"I'm told my symptoms were a textbook case for bipolar lows and highs – energetic, grandiose language, erratic – but no one even considered this diagnosis for me until I was sectioned."

From

Presented to players and coaches on the field before Friday’s game against the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium, the latest championship ring in Dodgers history is the most grandiose yet.

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Presented to players and coaches on the field before Friday night’s game against the Detroit Tigers at Dodger Stadium, the latest championship ring in Dodgers history is easily the most grandiose yet.

From

"It was captioned Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica. I just knew that grandiose title had obscured a real brutal legacy of slavery," she said.

From

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