Splendor in a sentence as a noun

You're rubber and he's glue, with all the mighty splendor of 4chan.

There is no splendor in nature that is not in the eyes of those watching it.

Our ancestors would be amazed at the splendor of our lives, and by this I mean our grandparents, not cavemen.

And then it would grab you by the throat, give an incredible speech that makes you realize the true splendor of life and then it would shut itself off.

And who is going to care about Earth's natural splendor when noone is around to appreciate it?Earth will drift on, as it always has and will.

Sometimes I don't know why we waist it all for silly business ventures instead of enjoying the splendor that the universe has to offer.

I played this for 6-7 minutes and can no longer do anything but cower in the horribly glorious splendor of the God of recursion.

Many of us can appreciate its awe inspiring technological splendor.

Of course, Unicode, in all its vastness and splendor, has chosen to include lots of code points that wouldn't traditionally be considered graphemes, and fonts are expected to contain specific visual representations for those as well.

To me, luxury is "opulence, luxuriousness, sumptuousness, grandeur, magnificence, splendor, lavishness, the lap of luxury, a bed of roses", and I don't associate those with typical developers.

> According to Newsweek, Alexanders experience proves that consciousness is independent of the brain, that death is an illusion, and that an eternity of perfect splendor awaits us beyond the grave ...If the account proved anything, it would be that science is dead.

Has there been a problem with pseudoanonymous people causing problems that this is trying to solve?I'm not opposed to it, but it does take away some of the splendor of AirBnB'ing, maybe it's just me but when I stay at AirBnB pads I like to feel like I've left my day to day work life behind and can now be who I want to be.

Splendor definitions

noun

a quality that outshines the usual

See also: luster lustre brilliancy splendour

noun

the quality of being magnificent or splendid or grand; "for magnificence and personal service there is the Queen's hotel"; "his `Hamlet' lacks the brilliance that one expects"; "it is the university that gives the scene its stately splendor"; "an imaginative mix of old-fashioned grandeur and colorful art"; "advertisers capitalize on the grandness and elegance it brings to their products"

See also: magnificence brilliance splendour grandeur grandness