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The phrase "a ponderous" is correct and usable in written English.
It usually means something is very large, heavy, or difficult to do. For example: The waiter had to lift a ponderous tray of dishes as he walked through the restaurant.
Exact(54)
But this is far from being a ponderous book about pondering.
The pastas should be better; a ponderous Petit Basque-covered truffle-laced gnocchi outstays its welcome.
It lacks, to use a ponderous word, gravitas.
The third movement, a ponderous scherzo, is not so effective.
It's a ponderous essay wrapped in melodramatic autobiography.
It was a ponderous, artless performance, but who cares?
I had written a ponderous quasi-Hebraic anthem.
The drone of falling credit numbers since then suggests a ponderous army in drawn-out retreat.
There Mr Hu gave a ponderous, jargon-laden speech lauding Mao.
A ponderous electronic score accompanied her as, facing upstage, she grasped at something in the air.
Would a new version be allowed to build at a ponderous pace?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com