Her legacy indeed is remarkable (it indeed put a mark), historic (indeed: factual) and tremendous:
tremendous (adj.)
1630s, "awful, dreadful, terrible," from Latin tremendus "fearful, to be dreaded, terrible," literally "to be trembled at," gerundive form of tremere "to tremble" (see tremble (v.)). Hyperbolic or intensive sense of "extraordinarily great or good, immense" is attested from 1812, paralleling semantic changes in terrific, terrible, dreadful, awful, etc. Related: Tremendously.
Don't get too excited. Plenty of well-read people are functionally illiterate. Consider the widespread misuse of "enormous." And the feeble attempt to substitute "issue" for "problem."
Her legacy indeed is remarkable (it indeed put a mark), historic (indeed: factual) and tremendous:
Sarcasm is something ....
Hello other former Latin student. I thought the same thing. Tremendous was a well chosen word. Optics for the normies and a slight nod to us.
Don't get too excited. Plenty of well-read people are functionally illiterate. Consider the widespread misuse of "enormous." And the feeble attempt to substitute "issue" for "problem."