super-superlative
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From super- + superlative.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]super-superlative (plural super-superlatives)
Adjective
[edit]super-superlative (not comparable)
- (rare) Beyond merely superlative; of the very highest or greatest quality; truly superb.
- 1823, The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction 1823-05-31: Volume 2 Issue 32[1], Open Court Publishing Company, page 29:
- His tongue was eternally running in praise of her super-superlative, never-to-be-described charms, and in hyperbolical accounts of the flames, darts, and daggers by which his luggs, liver, and midriff were burnt up, transfixed, and gnawed away.
- 1862, Samuel Smith Nicholas, Habeas Corpus, the Law of War, and Confiscation[2], Bradley & Gilbert, page 15:
- His intelligent countrymen will laugh at his ridiculous folly, but they cannot fail to pay the extorted tribute of admiration for his super-superlative impudence.
- 1877, William Matthews, Hours with Men and Books[3], S.C. Griggs and Company, page 183:
- There are whole pages in his history with hardly an adjective that is not super-superlative.
References
[edit]- “super-superlative”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.