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Sumptuous   /sˈəmptʃwəs/  /sˈəmptʃuəs/   Listen
Sumptuous

adjective
1.
Rich and superior in quality.  Synonyms: deluxe, gilded, grand, luxurious, opulent, princely.  "Gilded dining rooms"



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"Sumptuous" Quotes from Famous Books



... the beautiful villa on the Janiculum were constantly assailed by reporters; the servants who came out from time to time were bribed, flattered, and tempted away to eat sumptuous meals and drink the oldest wine in quiet gardens behind old inns in Trastevere, in the hope that they might have some information to sell. But no one gained admittance to the villa except the agents of the police, ...
— Whosoever Shall Offend • F. Marion Crawford

... that he went home. His sumptuous chariot with ninety race-horses concealed in the engine and velvet in its wheels slid him as on smoothest ice to his father's home near the cathedral. The house was like a child of the cathedral, and he went up its steps as a ...
— We Can't Have Everything • Rupert Hughes

... warder] had adopted the role of gaoler in his demeanour towards us, but after a while he became civil and deferential, and—when his son was captured in the war—actually sympathetic." (p. 45.) At Torgau "the meals, though far from sumptuous and not always palatable, were sufficient for our ...
— The Better Germany in War Time - Being some Facts towards Fellowship • Harold Picton

... purchased one of those large and sumptuous habitations which the old religious orders built about the Sorbonne, and as Thuillier mounted the broad stone steps with an iron balustrade, that proved how arts of the second class flourished under Louis XIII., he envied both the ...
— The Lesser Bourgeoisie • Honore de Balzac

... from the following description given by Professor Greaves in 1638:—"It is," he says, "a very stately piece of work, and not inferior, either in respect of the curiosity of art, or richness of materials, to the most sumptuous and magnificent buildings," and a little further on he says, "this gallery, or corridor, or whatever else I may call it, is built of white and polished marble (limestone), the which is very evenly cut in spacious squares or ...
— The Contemporary Review, Volume 36, September 1879 • Various


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