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Discover Ludwig"splendiferous" is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is an adjectival form from the noun "splendor" and is used to mean something that is splendid or magnificent. For example, you can say, "The night sky was filled with a splendiferous array of stars."
Dictionary
splendiferous
adjective
Beautiful, splendid
synonyms
Exact(55)
The reigning prince, Hans Adam II, whose splendiferous full name in German is Johannes (Hans -Adam II.
The conversation continues on a punt, then on a brisk walk around the university parks, then over tea, which slips into (more) sherry, and afterwards a splendiferous "high table" dinner.
By comparison, Philip Massinger's The City Madam, a satire from 1632 revived by the RSC, is a splendiferous romp, awash with silver and gold finery.
The climax takes place inside a mountain of pixum, yet the true highlight is Jackman, a splendiferous blend of the wheedling, the mournful, the murderous, and the throwaway.
On a recent Monday evening, tourists and locals sat under umbrellas at picnic tables, ate fish and chips, drank rosé, and gazed out at the splendiferous harbor views: ferries, birds, barges, clouds, water taxis, sailboats, schooners, flags, Castle Clinton, speedboats, the Statue of Liberty, the Verrazano-Narrows.
By the time the elaborately inlaid elevators made their first run up to the splendiferous Cloud Club, in the summer of 1930, a new "tallest building in the world" was under construction down on Thirty-fourth Street, and Walter Chrysler and Van Alen were at each other's throats.
As for broccoli cooked other ways, well, it can be splendiferous on top of cruciferous.
They were former waitresses, farmers' daughters and office workers who had dreamt of becoming part of Ziegfeld's own grand dream of "glorifying the American girl" (preferably with exact measurements of 36-26-38) in spectaclesouspectaclesespectacles
"Aoki," with its splendiferous pink celebration of Sakura Matsuri, the cherry blossom festival, is cuter by a hair.
It culminated in what is known as the Cambrian explosion, about 550 million years ago, when multicellular creatures, that is to say, animals, appeared in sudden splendiferous profusion in the fossil record.
And, of course, there is the show itself, featuring "Who Cares" and "Union Jack," two Balanchine works that offer both brilliant entertainment and glorious choreography, with splendiferous casts (Robert Fairchild, Tiler Peck, Teresa Reichlen and Sara Mearns in "Who Cares"; Joaquin De Luz, Tyler Angle, Jared Angle and Wendy Whelan, among others, in "Union Jack").
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com