huge
gigantesque
1598; ital. gigantesco, dér. de gigante «géant», de même orig. que géant (lat. pop. *gagas) ou du lat. gigas, gigantis.
=> géant.qul-âsâ
div-paykar
énorme
Etymology: Until the 18th century an enormity was an abnormality, an irregularity, something way outside the norm, since the word is derived from enorm "abnormal, perverted" from Latin enormis "abnormal, enormous" based on e(x) "out" + norma "carpenter's square, rule, norm." Latin "norma" probably comes from an Etruscan borrowing of Greek gnomon "carpenter's square, rule." The root of "gnomon" is the same as that of "know" and is found also in Latin ignorare "to not know" from which we borrowed both "ignore" and "ignorant." The meaning of "enormous," however, has gravitated toward abnormal only in size and that meaning eventually has influenced "enormity."burn-az-andâza
hangoft
+
fra. énormément de qqch : eng. awful lot of ... : andâza ye kalân i az ...
fra. énormes profits : sudhâ ye saršâr
huge
besar, kekar, sangat besar
huge
(ฮิวจฺ) adj. ใหญ่มาก,ใหญ่โต,มหึมา,มหาศาล. คำศัพท์ย่อย: hugely adv. hugeness n.
huge
ogromny, olbrzymi