Yes, it is. It can mean vast, expansive, huge, or enormous (very large).
-adjective 1. vast; huge; very great: an immense territory. 2. immeasurable; boundless. 3. Informal. splendid: You did an immense job getting the project started.The immense canyon was spanned by a rickety old wooden foot bridge.
Immense means huge, very large.
The job she was facing looked very immense. Looking over the ocean, the little girl could feel how immense it really was.
Immense
A mixture of amazing and immense.
Massive is an adjective, not to be confused with massif which is a noun.
Immensity of love. Immensity is a noun, not an adjective. Immense love would be okay; immense is an adjective.
No, the word 'immense' is not a noun, it is adjective that describes a noun as a very great in size or amount, for example an immense sandwich or an immense lie.The abstract noun forms for the adjective immense are immenseness and immensity.
No, "huge" is not a verb. It is an adjective used to describe something as very large or immense.
-adjective 1. vast; huge; very great: an immense territory. 2. immeasurable; boundless. 3. Informal. splendid: You did an immense job getting the project started.The immense canyon was spanned by a rickety old wooden foot bridge.
The word cathedral can be used as a noun = The cathedral is immense. or as an adjective: The new house has cathedral ceilings.
Immense.
You write it like this " A giant cabin is so immense"and that how you use immense in a sentence.
The word infinity is a noun. It is usually an uncountable noun.
There is an immense amount of concrete in that building.
Immense means huge, very large.
Miley Cyrus is a pop star who enjoys immense popularity. Many third world countries suffer with immense poverty. When the debts became too immense, we filed for bankruptcy.