WORD OF THE DAY
grandiose / adjective / gran-dee-OHSS
Definition
1: characterized by affectation of grandeur or splendor or by absurd exaggeration
2: impressive because of uncommon largeness, scope, effect, or grandeur
Examples
“Dave says their engineer had ‘grandiose ideas about wanting to make songs sound like Phil Spector,’ but the group steered the sound in a more austere direction, inspired by the first two Strokes albums, along with grungier records by Sheer Mag and fellow Aussies Royal Headache.”
— Evan Minsker, Pitchfork, 7 Apr. 2022
When real estate mogul Howard Ruby sold his grandiose Bel Air mansion for $35 million last month, many wondered what would become of the antique furniture and artwork within.
— Rachel Cormack, Robb Report, 15 Aug. 2022
Did You Know?
When it comes to bigness, there’s grand and then there’s grandiose.
Both words can be used to describe something impressive in size, scope, or effect, but while grand may lend its noun a bit of dignity (i.e., “we had a grand time”), grandiose often implies a whiff of pretension.
The difference between a grand plan for the city park and a grandiose one, for example, might be the difference between a tasteful fountain and a garden full of topiaries cut in the shapes of 19th century literary figures.
So if you’re choosing between the two, a helpful mnemonic might be that the extra letters in grandiose suggest that one’s ideas, claims, promises, schemes, dreams—you get the idea—are a bit extra.
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