There was no Leonardo the Magnificent.
Lorenzo de Medici was known as Lorenzo the Magnificent.
Lorenzo Medici (Lorenzo the Magnificent) was having a painting done at Florence's busiest studio and saw Leonardo's work when he was just starting his career and began promoting his work. something like that
It is always an adjective. It can appear to be an appositive noun (e.g. Carnac the Magnificent) but this is part of a title using the adjective (e.g. The Magnificent Ambersons).
Leonardo
Leonardo Da Vinci
Leonardo da vinci
Lorenzo Medici (Lorenzo the Magnificent) was having a painting done at Florence's busiest studio and saw Leonardo's work when he was just starting his career and began promoting his work. something like that
Leonardo da Vinci was an accomplished sculptor and although he was trained in a variety of art forms including fresco he was reluctant to paint the Sistine Chapel. His own attitude about his painting is the main reason he is thought of as a sculptor and inventor before a magnificent painter.
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.
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."
Leonardo da Vinci was an amzing legend. Although he cut his ear off, he was very smart. Da Vinci was a talented human being whom sculpted and painted. He is just as fabulous as Michaelangelo. Leonarda da Vinci changed the Renaissance by his positive spirit and his inspiring figures on canvas's and clay formed into magnificent bodies made by man-not by china. Leonardo da Vinci is most wonderful.
The magnificent diamond shone and sparkled in the sunlight. The music was magnificent has the organ blasted out the sounds.
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.