Definition of gigantismnext

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of gigantism Cut off from outside populations, Rome’s freshwater crabs developed a form of gigantism. Krista Langlois, Smithsonian Magazine, 7 July 2025 There were several pictures of people suffering from gigantism, a defect that makes the pituitary gland produce excess growth hormone. Jane Smiley june 20, Literary Hub, 20 June 2025 This dramatic transformation is among the most extreme cases of island gigantism in birds, likely unfolding in under two million years as the eagle adapted to New Zealand’s ecosystem. Scott Travers, Forbes.com, 17 May 2025 Nevertheless, 2023 saw several interesting developments in fusion, mostly in connection with startup companies pursuing alternative approaches to the money-pit gigantism of ITER and the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Glenn Zorpette, IEEE Spectrum, 31 Dec. 2023 See All Example Sentences for gigantism
Recent Examples of Synonyms for gigantism
Noun
  • These are the kinds of performances a team needs to pull off an upset of the magnitude that the Wolves just pulled off.
    Jon Krawczynski, New York Times, 1 May 2026
  • Due to such factors, the MDH could not determine the apparent miscount’s magnitude.
    Mia Cathell, The Washington Examiner, 30 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Brontotheres, the ancient North American ancestors of the horse, is a giantism outlier as—growing from around 40 pounds to four to five tons in 16 million years.
    Darren Orf, Popular Mechanics, 16 May 2023
  • In an especially mind-bending passage, Wengrow and Graeber show that the majority of Paleolithic tombs contained not grandees but individuals with physical anomalies including dwarfism, giantism, and spinal abnormalities.
    Virginia Heffernan, Wired, 11 July 2022
Noun
  • Originally staged at Avignon in 2025, the play follows a father and daughter whose bond is tested across the vastness of space as one of them starts a new life on Mars while Earth deteriorates.
    Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 16 Apr. 2026
  • The majesty of the natural world and the incomprehensible vastness of space are almost infinitely rearrangeable variables for documentarians.
    David Faris, TheWeek, 13 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Nowhere in the vestiges of what was once the sprawl of corporate hugeness known as The General Electric Company are there signs that Katharine Blodgett's laboratory notebooks still exist.
    Natalia Sánchez Loayza, Scientific American, 13 Mar. 2026
  • Like Phish or Taylor Swift or The Dead, 21P have created a universe for their fans that is a self-sustaining mechanism, even if the hugeness of it doesn’t always translate into huge chart success.
    Gil Kaufman, Billboard, 23 Sep. 2025
Noun
  • His novels, especially the later ones, were rigorous, ecstatic immensities unlike anything that anticipated them.
    Becca Rothfeld, New Yorker, 23 Apr. 2026
  • This is the brilliance and haunting immensity of Cauleen Smith’s The Warden, 2025.
    Horace D. Ballard, Artforum, 22 Apr. 2026

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Cite this Entry

“Gigantism.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/gigantism. Accessed 3 May. 2026.

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