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splendid (adj.)

1620s, "marked by grandeur," probably a shortening of earlier splendidious (early 15c.), from Latin splendidus "bright, shining, glittering; sumptuous, gorgeous, grand; illustrious, distinguished, noble; showy, fine, specious," from splendere "be bright, shine, gleam, glisten," from PIE *splnd- "to be manifest" (source also of Lithuanian splendžiu "I shine," Middle Irish lainn "bright"). An earlier form was splendent (late 15c.). From 1640s as "brilliant, dazzling;" 1640s as "conspicuous, illustrious; very fine, excellent." Ironic use (as in splendid isolation, 1843) is attested from 17c.

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Definitions of splendid from WordNet

splendid (adj.)
having great beauty and splendor;
splendid costumes
splendid (adj.)
very good; of the highest quality;
he was a splendid teacher
splendid (adj.)
characterized by grandeur;
the splendid coronation ceremony
From wordnet.princeton.edu