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View synonyms for

gigantic

[jahy-gan-tik, ji-]

adjective

  1. very large; huge.

    a gigantic statue.

    Synonyms: , , , , ,
    Antonyms:
  2. of, like, or befitting a giant.



gigantic

/ ɪˈɡæԳɪ /

adjective

  1. very large; enormous

    a gigantic error

  2. Also: gigantesque.of or suitable for giants

“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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Other Word Forms

  • gigantically adverb
  • giganticness noun
  • ˈԳپ adverb
  • ˈԳپԱ noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of gigantic1

1605–15; from Latin gigant- giant + -ic
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Word History and Origins

Origin of gigantic1

C17: from Greek gigantikos, from gigas giant
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Synonym Study

Gigantic, colossal, mammoth, monstrous are used of whatever is physically or metaphorically of great magnitude. Gigantic refers to the size of a giant, or to size or scope befitting a giant: a gigantic stalk of corn. Colossal refers to the size of a colossus, to anything huge or vast as befitting a hero or god: a colossal victory. Mammoth refers to the size of the animal of that name and is used especially of anything large and heavy: a mammoth battleship. Monstrous means strikingly unusual or out of the normal in some way, as in size: a monstrous blunder.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

“They’re not wrong to be afraid. I think they’re wrong to be as afraid as they are because it’s a retrenchment, and it’s a retrenchment following a gigantic expansion.”

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“There’s plane everywhere,” Eddy said, calling the scene a “gigantic debris field.”

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Soon enough, they’d built up a gigantic digital file full of lessons on grief, body image, health and other topics.

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I grabbed a ticket in Indianapolis, I walked in like, “Wow OK, the screen’s gigantic,” and it just blew my mind how big it was compared to the Imax I know at home.

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"These have not been seen before and it shows definitively that the UK had ice shelves, because that's the only way to produce these gigantic tabular icebergs."

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When To Use

doesgigantic mean?

Gigantic means extraordinarily large or huge. Some things are more than huge—they’re gigantic.The word is most often applied to physical objects whose size makes you marvel with awe. Blue whales are gigantic. Skyscrapers are gigantic. The Grand Canyon is gigantic.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 gigantic. Similar adjectives are gargantuan, giant, colossal, and mammoth. A more formal synonym is massive. A more informal synonym is humongous. An even more informal synonym is ginormous (a blend of giant or gigantic and enormous). A much less common variant of gigantic is gigantean.Like any adjective used to describe something’s size, gigantic is often used in a way that’s relative to the situation. Many things described as gigantic are objectively huge, like redwood trees or the planet Jupiter. But something might be considered gigantic only in comparison to other similar things. For example, an unusually large grapefruit might be described as gigantic even though it’s not all that big in general—it’s simply gigantic compared to normal-sized grapefruits.Gigantic is sometimes casually used to mean extremely important or significant—much like the figurative use of big and huge, as in This is a gigantic win for the franchise. Sometimes, this is negative, as in gigantic error, gigantic failure, or gigantic misunderstanding.Example: You don’t realize how gigantic the sun is until you see an image of a planet next to it for scale.

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