Adjective
large-sized (comparative larger-sized, superlative largest-sized)
Having a big size.
Coordinate terms: small-sized, medium-sized
During the late 1990s more than 10,500 small enterprises had been privatized, and although privatization of medium- and large-sized firms had been slow, more than 1,200 medium - and large-sized companies had been set up as joint stock companies. Source: Internet
Smaller engines would be built with vertical cylinders, while most medium- and large-sized industrial engines were built with horizontal cylinders, just as steam engines had been. Source: Internet
To kill medium- to large-sized prey, the cheetah bites the prey's throat to suffocate it to death. Source: Internet
In the same period, sales of Samsung TVs in the South American market spiked nearly four times, and the demand for large-sized Samsung TVs almost doubled in Korea. Source: Internet
In these frogs, the large-sized mature egg cells doubled as compared to frogs exposed to high temperature and just 12 hours of light. Source: Internet
Some designers tend to use heavy HTML coding, large-sized images, and big flash files to improve the design and look of the website. Source: Internet