On holiday recently, we stayed in a luxurious hotel
Opulent would be a suitable replacement for luxurious in this sentence.
For someone on a tight budget, she sure has a lavishly furnished apartment.
Ritzy is slang for something expensive. Here is a sentence example: Emmett wanted to stay home and watch the football game, but Rosalie insisted that they go out to eat at a ritzy restaurant downtown.
use ize in sentence
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.
Opulent would be a suitable replacement for luxurious in this sentence.
My house is the most luxurious place of all.
Taffeta can make a more luxurious dress than some similar materials.
It is a adjective, i.e. a word that modifies a noun.This postbellum product is not as luxurious as those before the war.
"For a brief period in history, one of the most luxurious and stately ways of travel, was aboard a dirigible."
David bought a luxurious suit for 800 dollars, but found it only to be worth 300.
She spent the afternoon in a luxurious, upscale spa. She dislikes camping and would prefer a night in a luxurious hotel.
The big house with high cielings and spiral starecase was luxurious.
The luxurious cab pulled up next to the curb and I saw a woman with dark glasses pull back her hair and step inside.
For someone on a tight budget, she sure has a lavishly furnished apartment.
The artesian spring is just over this next rise in the trail.
Ritzy is slang for something expensive. Here is a sentence example: Emmett wanted to stay home and watch the football game, but Rosalie insisted that they go out to eat at a ritzy restaurant downtown.