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Definitions

paradisaical

[par-uh-di-sey-i-kuhl, -zey-, -dahy-] / ˌpær ə dɪˈseɪ ɪ kəl, -ˈzeɪ-, -daɪ- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

When Queen Elizabeth’s yacht, Britannia, steamed to the Maldives’ main island, Male, in 1972, she was the first head of any state to visit the paradisaical speck of Britain’s Commonwealth.

From New York Times • Apr. 26, 2012

Quadruple the footprint, pad the seats, replace The Time Traveller's sodding Wife with a microwave, and it becomes the bibliophile's paradisaical starter home.

From The Guardian • Jul. 13, 2010

From her apartment in "Jerusalem," one of the House of David's less than paradisaical buildings, Ada Jeffrey was minding the colony's dairy operation as she has done for 60 years.

From Time Magazine Archive

All that was tangled in life straightened out before them, the future seemed a sort of paradisaical boulevard.

From Comrade Yetta by Edwards, Albert

It is the orthodox, paradisaical view of the origin, unity, and primal perfection of the human race.

From The Middle Period 1817-1858 by Burgess, John William