sesquipedalianist
A person who uses large unnecessary words in a sentence is often referred to as "grandiloquent" or "sesquipedalian." They may be trying to appear more intelligent or sophisticated by using complex language.
A bilingual person is someone who is able to speak, read, and write in two languages fluently.
She received a large inheritance from her wealthy grandmother.
The complete subject of the sentence is "a large collection of music manuscript." It includes the article "a" along with the descriptive phrase "of music manuscript," which specifies the type of collection.
Delegate-at-large should be capitalized as follows: Delegate-at-Large.
The large lummox clumsily bumped into everyone at the party.
Business
A large, unruly person is often referred to as a hooligan, sometimes a brute, others a behemoth.
We live in a large house with a stable and a Horse called Jute.
A statue can be of a person or an animal. We have a large statue of a soldier in our park.
A trawler is a fishing boat that drags a large fishing net called a trawl.
Overproduction is when a business has a collection of goods that are unsaleable. It is when there is a large unnecessary excess of goods.
The framework is fairly large. For some projects it might be unnecessary.
speculator
This is known as an ironic nickname; the literary device is called verbal irony.
Large is an adjective. In this sentence it is describing the noun fish and is part of the subject (large fish) of the sentence.
because of its large area which no person knows how big it is
Demise means a person's death or a transfer of property by demising. Ecosystems can become out of balance with the demise of large animals.