Prodigious in a sentence as an adjective

In sales charts that tracked existing established sales channels, that looks like a prodigious drop.

> We're reinventing wheels at a prodigious pace[...]What you see as waste, I see as valuable experience.

VC-funded startups have always burned cash at prodigious rates.

You get a one-to-many leverage on the backs of Google's prodigious crawler farm.

He was certainly prodigious and his accomplishments at such a young age really can't be overstated.

I was one of those sushi eaters who downed prodigious amounts of soy sauce.- We normally worked until 6pm, then went out for dinner and drinks.

Mainframes tend to have prodigious amounts of expensive, unusually fast, specialised RAM.

Rupert argues that the links to big financial institutions are often quite clear, and he backs up his arguments with fairly prodigious research.

Your prodigious propagandization of your paymaster is praiseworthy, but you don't need to take michaelochurch seriously to perceive this isn't a perfect picture of paradise.

But they didn't fly at supersonic speed and high altitude in crowded airspace -- simply because getting an SST up to altitude and speed takes several minutes, a couple of hundred miles, and a prodigious amount of fuel.

Assuming both that it works and that one wants to do a prodigious amount of enterprise sales, this is probably something which is actually easier to sell to comparatively rich countries rather than comparatively non-rich countries.

Policing comfort zones is a sure-fire intimacy killer, and it isn't exactly a triumph of empathy to avoid uncomfortable topics of conversation, even if it requires prodigious skill at empathy.

In praise \nof his prodigious business acumen, the administration-run \nUC Berkeley News decided to run an article on him in 2003, \nchampioning his ability to make money and enable the \nhousing bubble that was just starting to expand.

Prodigious definitions

adjective

so great in size or force or extent as to elicit awe; "colossal crumbling ruins of an ancient temple"; "has a colossal nerve"; "a prodigious storm"; "a stupendous field of grass"; "stupendous demand"

See also: colossal stupendous

adjective

of momentous or ominous significance; "such a portentous...monster raised all my curiosity"- Herman Melville; "a prodigious vision"

See also: portentous

adjective

far beyond what is usual in magnitude or degree; "a night of exceeding darkness"; "an exceptional memory"; "olympian efforts to save the city from bankruptcy"; "the young Mozart's prodigious talents"

See also: exceeding exceptional olympian surpassing