The word “Brobdingnagian” means extremely large, gigantic, or of tremendous size, and it comes from the land of Brobdingnag in Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels , where everything is enormous.

Quick meaning

  • Part of speech: Usually an adjective, sometimes a noun.
  • Core sense: Immense, colossal, far larger than usual.
  • Capitalization: Often capitalized (Brobdingnagian) because it comes from a place name in literature.

Origin in literature

  • The word comes from Brobdingnag , a fictional land of giants in Jonathan Swift’s 1726 novel Gulliver’s Travels.
  • In that section of the book, Gulliver finds himself tiny among gigantic people and objects, inspiring the later adjective “Brobdingnagian” for anything giant-sized.

How it’s used in sentences

  • As an adjective: “They built a Brobdingnagian stadium that can hold over 100,000 people.”
  • As a (figurative) noun: “The new skyscraper is a glass Brobdingnagian towering over the old town.”

Literal vs. figurative sense

  • Literal: Describing something physically huge, like a massive building, pizza, or binder.
  • Figurative: Used for outsized things like a “Brobdingnagian ego” or “Brobdingnagian ambitions,” meaning they are huge in degree, not size.

In short, if “huge,” “gigantic,” and “enormous” still don’t feel big enough, “Brobdingnagian” is the over-the-top word that does the job.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.