supergargantuan
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From super- + gargantuan.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (General American) IPA(key): /suːpəɹˈɡɑɹˈɡæn.t͡ʃu.ən/
Adjective
[edit]supergargantuan (comparative more supergargantuan, superlative most supergargantuan)
- (rare) Exceptionally gargantuan; extraordinarily large or great.
- 1938 April 30, Mabel Keefer, “Cinematic Soliloquy: Induced by Random Notes from the Little Scratch Pad of Mabel Keefer”, in Hollywood Spectator[1], Hollywood Spectator, Inc., page 15:
- QUOTING LeRoy Prinz, dance director in chief for Paramount, the New York Herald Tribune says: ‘‘He contends that the supergargantuan musicals that have been rolling out of Hollywood will be replaced soon by new musicals of more intimate nature.” Glory be!
- 1940, Poul Anderson, Musical Courier 1940-12-01: Volume 122 Issue 11[2], Summy-Birchard Publishing Company, page 70:
- Recently a fairly young man was put in charge of the supergargantuan performances of Wagner at the Metropolitan Opera.
- 1958, Commonweal, Volume 68[3], Commonweal Publishing Corporation, page 326:
- The monstrous near-nude lady and gent who used, oddly enough, to advertise a clothing store, have fallen before the wreckers and have been replaced by two supergargantuan pop bottles separated, just as oddly, by a Niagara of a waterfall.
- 1959, The Nation, Volume 188[4], J.H. Richards, page 60:
- The Rand-type thinkman thinks only about death and how to inflict it on a supergargantuan scale.
- 2010 June 4, Michael Lynderey, “June 2010 Forecast”, in www.boxofficeprophets.com[5], archived from the original on 21 January 2021:
- June 2010 appears relatively massive, with a slow streak ending on the 18th and giving way to an escalation of blockbusters - in what looks to be 15 days of supergargantuan box office.