Yes.
The word 'gigantic' is the adjective form of the noun giant.
The word 'titanic' (lower case t) is an adjective, a word that describes a noun as enormous or gigantic. The word 'Titantic' (capital T) is a noun, a proper noun, the name of a specific ship (RMS Titanic, sunk in the Atlantic Ocean in 1912).
The noun form of the adjective 'gigantic' is giganticness. A related noun form is giant.
Yes, "woken" is a real word. It is the past participle of the verb "wake."
Yes, the word "finest" is real. It is an adjective that describes something superlative or of the highest quality.
Ginormous is not a real word, but a humorous conflation of two other words: enormous and gigantic. Enormous means "a lot bigger than normal or usual" and gigantic means "like a giant."
Yes, ginormous is a real word, circa 1948, combining "gigantic" & "enormous".
oh my god that tower is gigantic
Yes, gigantic is an adjective (word that describes a noun). Example: Billy has a gigantic headache.
Yes, gigantic is an adjective (word that describes a noun). Example: Billy has a gigantic headache.
The word "gigantic" is an adjective, describing something really, really large. But not every adjective can become a noun. Gigantic does not have a noun form.
There are three syllables in the word "gigantic."
giant and gigantic
The word 'gigantic' is the adjective form of the noun giant.
none a gigantic shark is not a real "breed" of shark
If something is gigantic, it is large. For example, a sentence using the word would be "The monster is absolutely gigantic." It means large, as well as big.
That's one gigantic dog; are you sure it's not a horse.