TITANIC


Meaning of TITANIC in English

I. ti·tan·ic (ˈ)tī|tanik, -nēk sometimes tə̇ˈt- adjective

Etymology: Greek titanikos, from Titan + -ikos -ic

1. usually capitalized : of, relating to, or held to have characteristics of the Titans of ancient Greek mythology

2. sometimes capitalized : resembling a titan (as in size or character): as

a. : marked by very great size : of enormous magnitude, power, scope, strength, or influence : colossal , gigantic

great factories hummed like one unanimous titanic loom — Donn Byrne

a titanic archipelago — Natural History

political change … on a titanic scale — H.J.Laski

b.

(1) : manifesting superhuman power or force : exerting more than human strength : marked by tremendous brute force

(2) : calling for the exertion of such strength or power

the titanic labor of clearing away the debris after the air raid

done a titanic job of streamlining and reorganizing the service — Americas

c. : earthshaking

a titanic civil war that all but destroyed the country — G.W.Johnson

a titanic struggle

Synonyms: see huge

II. ti·tanic (ˈ)tī|tanik tə̇ˈt-, -ˈtān-, -nēk adjective

Etymology: New Latin titan ium + English -ic

: of, relating to, or containing titanium — used especially of compounds in which this element is tetravalent; compare titanous

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.