ponderous
1 of 1adjective/ˈpɑndərəs/
Forms:more ponderous,most ponderous
1
difficult to move or manage due to bulk
C2- The ponderous sofa wouldn't fit through the narrow hallway.
- He made a ponderous turn in the oversized truck.
- The robot's ponderous movements made it slow and awkward.
- The elephant's ponderous steps shook the ground.
- The book's ponderous design made it hard to hold while reading.
2
of great physical weight
- The ponderous safe required a forklift to move.
- He struggled to carry the ponderous stone up the hill.
- The ancient bell was ponderous, cast in solid iron.
- A ponderous slab of marble lay across the foundation.
- The chest was ponderous, packed with gold and tools.
3
possessing the quality of being very boring, slow, and serious, particularly used for speeches and writings
- The professor's ponderous lecture made it hard for students to stay awake.
- His ponderous writing style often led readers to lose interest quickly.
- The meeting dragged on with ponderous speeches that felt interminable.
- The novel was criticized for its ponderous prose and lack of engaging dialogue.
- His ponderous delivery of the speech seemed to put the audience to sleep.