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Grand ɡrænd House Impressive Great Adjective Wedding Occasion

Word3 grand
WordType (adjective)
Phonetic /ɡrænd/ /ɡrænd/
Example
  • it's not a very grand house.
  • the wedding was a very grand occasion.
  • the book dares to take on grand themes in the grand manner.
  • the grand canyon
Sound Online sound. https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/media/english/us_pron/g/gra/grand/grand__us_1.mp3
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Content

grand

(adjective)/ɡrænd/ /ɡrænd/
  1. impressive and large or important
    • It's not a very grand house.
    • The wedding was a very grand occasion.
    • The book dares to take on grand themes in the grand manner.
  2. used in the names of impressive or very large buildings, etc.
    • the Grand Canyon
    • We stayed at the Grand Hotel.
  3. needing a lot of effort, money or time to succeed but intended to achieve impressive results
    • a grand plan/strategy/scheme
    • The gallery had its grand opening on 18 January.
    • New Yorkers built their city on a grand scale.
  4. used to describe the largest or most important item of its kind
    • The film won the grand prize at the Berlin Film Festival.
    • Tomorrow is the grand final with just 12 contestants left from the hundreds who entered.
  5. behaving in a proud way because they are rich or from a high social class
    • They're all Lord or Lady somebody or other, but they're not at all grand.
    • She put on her grandest air and waltzed into the living room to join the others.
  6. very good or great fun; excellent
    • I had a grand day out at the seaside.
    • Thanks. That'll be grand!
    • Fred did a grand job of painting the house.
  7. used in the titles of people of very high social rank
    • the Grand Duchess Elena
  8. a great age
    • She finally learned to drive at the grand old age of 70.
  9. a man who is respected in a particular profession that he has been involved in for a long time
    • James Lovelock, the grand old man of environmental science

    Word Origin

    • Middle English: from Old French grant, grand, from Latin grandis ‘full-grown, big, great’. The original uses were to denote family relationships and as a title (the Grand, translating Old French le Grand); hence the senses ‘of the highest rank’, ‘of great importance’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: b2

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