Prodigious means extraordinary in aspect, such as size or degree. Tremendous and stupendous are two words related to prodigious. "I was overwhelmed at work with the prodigious amount of filing that needed to get done."
Prodigious is not a verb, it is an adjective. You can tell just by looking at him that his ego is prodigious.
A prodigious grant was awarded for research in lung cancer.
You just did! Well done!!!!!!!he/she asked for a sentence not a questionSamson, even blind, was still capable of prodigious feats once his hair grew backThe prodigious storm came from nowhere.
Mozart had a prodigious talent, playing and composing extensively during his short life.
You can use "prodigious" to describe a large or impressive quantity, so it is appropriate to say "prodigious number of users." This phrase emphasizes the remarkable scale of the user base. Saying "prodigious users" is less common and could imply that the users themselves possess extraordinary qualities, which may not be the intended meaning.
The proboscis of the pachyderm is prodigious. (politely played!) (Practically perfect!)
In a prodigious display of athleticism, he won his first quarter mile race by several seconds. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in chemistry for his prodigious success with innovative cancer drugs. From a very young age her grace and skill as a dancer reached prodigious proportions, but she chose instead to become a nuclear engineer. Did Earl Woods have any idea that his son would eventually have such a prodigious, young golfer?
Prodigious is an adjective.
Overheard being said to Cyrano de Bergerac: Is your talent with a sword as prodigious as your nose?The parting and subsequent closing of the Red Sea was such a prodigious pair of events that the Egyptian cavalry forces were laid to waste and the Pharoah was resigned to drop the pursuit of his former Hebrew slaves.Morro Bay has a prodigious landmark known as Morro Rock.
The colossal foot print was prodigious. I knew that it had to be a dinosaur's
The root of "prodigious" is the Latin word "prodigiosus," meaning extraordinary or wonderful.
Prodigious means "exciting wonder--extraordinary in size or degree."Even as an experienced mountaineer, my mind went blank before the prodigious sight of Mount Everest.In his youth he is said to have had a prodigious appetite, being able to consume nine pounds of steak at a meal.