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the prodigious
adjective
Very big in size or quantity; gigantic; colossal; huge.
Exact(59)
The Return of the Prodigious Son.
Even as we approached the end, we cursed the prodigious mudholes and the fickle skies.
Much-awaited is the prodigious director Julie Taymor's adaptation of Shakespeare's "The Tempest" (December 10th).
Gone were the former residents, and the barred, tiled rooms and the prodigious stench.
To reassure financial markets jittering over the prodigious size of government borrowing, the chancellor showed restraint.
Marble sculptures by the prodigious Baroque artist are rarely seen outside Italy.
So did the prodigious output of books, roughly one a year.
There's Cespedes of course, but also the prodigious second baseman Daniel Murphy.
The prodigious Mr. Zimerman gives a formidable, wondrously colored account of the work.
The prodigious energy and determination displayed by Richard Attenborough were matched by his generosity.
Or maybe just about imaginable to anyone who knew the prodigious Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela.
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