Definition

From an insider's perspective here at ginormous.com.au, for a thing, entity or event to be ginormous, it would have to be both giant (among their kind) and enormous (in scale). If not, there are shorter words than "ginormous" which would suffice as an adjective. See synonyms for ginormous.

Here the debate begins. A very large ant may be a giant among ants, or even declared "gigantic", relatively speaking. But would it be ginormous? The argument weighs against, given that a tremendously gigantic ant is still just an ant, and therefore unqualified on the tremendous scale of size, bulk, scale or impact required to leave the undoubted impression of ginormousness, err, ginormity.

Whatever the definition, one thing is for sure. If you want to create a huge online presence for your small to medium-sized business, call B2B representative Beck McLaughlin on 0447 557 522.


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