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monster

scary creature / cruel person / gigantic / to distort
AdjectiveTransitive Verb[C/U] Both
pl: monsterspp: monstereding: monstering

This word carries a heavy emotional weight of fear and repulsion. When applied to a creature, it evokes a sense of the uncanny or the supernatural, often representing the unknown shadows of the subconscious. When applied to humans, it strips away the subject's humanity, suggesting a total lack of empathy or a moral vacuum. As an adjective, it shifts into a more colloquial, hyperbolic tone, emphasizing sheer scale rather than horror.

Countable when referring to a specific creature or a cruel individual. Uncountable when used as an adjective describing size or as a general concept of monstrosity.

💬Casual Conversation

🎬Friday afternoon in the office breakroom, Mark is pretending to work while David is in a meeting.
Mark

Yo, just saw the report you sent. That spreadsheet is a total monster.

Mark
David
David

Right? It's basically a deep dive into our core KPIs. Totally disruptive stuff.

💡
Mark uses 'monster' as an adjective meaning extremely large/overwhelming to describe the workload, while David responds with corporate buzzwords ('deep dive', 'KPIs', 'disruptive') to sound like a visionary manager.

Meanings

Nounscary creature

An imaginary creature that is typically large, ugly, and frightening.

"The child was afraid there was a monster under her bed."

Nouncruel person

A person who is extremely cruel, wicked, or inhuman.

"The dictator was described as a monster for the atrocities he committed."

Adjectivegigantic

Extremely large in size or amount; gigantic.

"They shared a monster pizza that barely fit on the table."

Transitive Verbto distort
[~ someone][~ something]

To make something monstrous or distort it into a frightening form.

"The propaganda sought to monster the opposition in the eyes of the public."

Related Words

Last Updated: June 8, 2026Report an Error