Idiom is correct.
more magnificent
more magnificent
Magnificent is an adjective. For example: She painted a dramatic landscape of magnificent mountains. Magnificently, a derivative of magnificent, is an adverb.
There was no Leonardo the Magnificent. Lorenzo de Medici was known as Lorenzo the Magnificent.
Superlative: most magnificent Comparative: more magnificent
No, the word magnificent is not an adverb.The adverb form of the word "magnificent" is magnificently.
It means that there was no magnificent will
"Malevolent" rhymes with "magnificent" and starts with the letter "m."
The castle stood tall and magnificent against the backdrop of the setting sun.
Great is a different way of saying 'magnificent'. It tends to be interchanged with 'magnificent' as the interjection 'Great!' Splendid is another, different way of saying 'magnificent'. It tends to be interchanged with 'magnificent' as the description of a 'magnificent' or 'splendid' palace.
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