No, but "awesome" and "great" are synonyms for epic.
No, landmark and epic are not synonymous. A landmark typically refers to a significant or important point in time or a physical location, while epic is often used to describe something grand in scale or heroic in nature.
No, but milestone, marker or memorial are.
Majestic piece of literature sry that is not very helpful
tale, saga
awesome
In the slang term (ie "that beard is epic", "what an epic show", etc), yes. But if you look at the actual definition, no. Try heroic or bold.
cool, amazing, incredible, great, magnificent, epic
massive, huge, giant, humongous, epic etc. missy e xx
Coolio is a great word because it is basically a synonym for cool, epic and awesome.
There are several synonyms for the word 'landmark': noun: marker, familiar sight, sight, attraction, sign, or pointer. adjective: milestone, breakthrough, revolutionary, or innovative. Hope this helps!
Muckraker and socialist Upton Sinclair, author of the landmark 1906 novel The Jungle, ran on the EPIC (End Poverty in California) platform as a Democrat for the 1934 California gubernatorial election. Although Sinclair lost by a sizable margin, the EPIC movement helped to gain support for Roosevelt's New Deal Programs, many of which were comparable to those of the EPIC movement.Hopefully this was the 'EPIC' you were referring to.
Yes, they can be used as synonyms. They have a shared meaning element, but depending on context they can mean very different things.
Synonyms for legendary (as used by Barney Stinson) would be "epic" or "excellent." Synonym for legendary (as in a knight of legend) would be "fabled" or "heroic" and a synonym for legendary (as in a legendary sports figure) would be "renowned" or "famous."