My house is the most luxurious place of all.
Opulent would be a suitable replacement for luxurious in this sentence.
The big house with high cielings and spiral starecase was luxurious.
She spent the afternoon in a luxurious, upscale spa. She dislikes camping and would prefer a night in a luxurious hotel.
No, the word 'luxurious' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The word 'luxurious' is the adjective form of the abstract noun luxury, a word for a concept.
The opulent mansion was adorned with gold trimmings and velvet drapes, creating a luxurious and grand atmosphere.
The adverb form of the word "luxurious" is luxuriously.An example sentence is: "the hotel spa was luxuriously relaxing".
The comparative form of "luxury" is "more luxurious."
It is a adjective, i.e. a word that modifies a noun.This postbellum product is not as luxurious as those before the war.
She stayed at a luxurious resort with breathtaking ocean views during her vacation.
You just used the word acolytes in a sentence. Even saying, "can the word acolytes be used in a sentence", you are using that word in a sentence.
luxurious can be used both as synonym & antonym. luxurious is synonym for opulence/rich luxurious can be antonym for thrifty/poor
The word "incidentally" can be used at the end of a sentence. You can make the sentence "This was done incidentally.".