Luxurious describes something full of luxury, comfort, and richness, typically involving expensive materials or a lavish experience. It conveys excess and indulgence, often implying high quality and sensory appeal. The term can describe objects, settings, or lifestyles that emphasize opulence and refinement.
- US: The second syllable carries primary stress, with a crisp /ʒ/ in the middle; vowels are relatively tight. - UK: The /jʊə/ or /jʊəri/ sequence can be a touch longer; less rhotic influence, more fronted vowel quality. - AU: Similar to UK but with slightly more open vowels and clearer consonant articulation; keep the /ɒ/ or /ɔː/ alignment in the middle depending on speaker. IPA references: /lʌɡˈzjʊəriəs/ (UK), /lʌɡˈʒʊəriəs/ (US), /lʌkˈdzjʊəriəs/ (AU). Tips: keep the zh-like core consistent across accents, adjust vowel rounding, and avoid over-emphasizing the final -əs.
"The hotel offered luxurious suites with marble bathrooms and chandeliers."
"She wore a luxurious velvet dress that shimmered in the evening light."
"The spa provided a luxurious retreat, complete with aromatherapy and soft music."
"They lived a luxurious life, filled with fine dining and exclusive events."
Luxurious comes from the Latin luxuriosus, meaning ‘full of luxury,’ itself derived from luxus meaning ‘excess, luxury, extravagance.’ The root lux- relates to light, brightness and splendor through Latin and later French influence. In medieval and early modern English, luxuria or luxurie framed moral and social judgments about excess. By the 17th–18th centuries, luxurious began to describe things characterized by rich, lavish quality rather than mere abundance, expanding from material wealth to experiences and appearances. The modern form emphasizes sensory appeal and opulence, often implying both high quality and potential excess. First known use in English traces to the 15th century in various forms, but the current adjective form became standardized with late Renaissance influence, aligning with broader stylistic language about wealth and refinement.
💡 Etymology tip: Understanding word origins can help you remember pronunciation patterns and recognize related words in the same language family.
Help others use "Luxurious" correctly by contributing grammar tips, common mistakes, and context guidance.
💡 These words have similar meanings to "Luxurious" and can often be used interchangeably.
🔄 These words have opposite meanings to "Luxurious" and show contrast in usage.
📚 Vocabulary tip: Learning synonyms and antonyms helps you understand nuanced differences in meaning and improves your word choice in speaking and writing.
Words that rhyme with "Luxurious"
-ous sounds
Practice with these rhyming pairs to improve your pronunciation consistency:
🎵 Rhyme tip: Practicing with rhyming words helps you master similar sound patterns and improves your overall pronunciation accuracy.
Phonetically, Luxurious is luh-GZHOOR-ee-uhs, with IPA: US /lʌɡˈʒʊəriəs/ or /ləɡˈzjuːriəs/, UK /lʌɡˈzjʊəriəs/, AU /lʊkˈdzjʊəriəs/. The main stress falls on the second syllable: lu-GU-ri-ous. Start with a light “l”, then a quick “g” (soft), followed by a ʒ sound (as in measure) for the “gious” portion, then a schwa and an /iəs/ ending. Keep the final vowel cluster clear but not drawn-out; avoid turning it into a hard “ous.” Audio reference: listen for the moderate secondary stress and the smooth transition into the final unstressed suffix.
Common errors include: misplacing stress (lou-GEO-ree-us instead of lu-GZHOOR-i-əs) and turning the middle -z- into a hard s or z sound without the soft j- or zh- quality. Another pitfall is elongating the final -ous to a full syllable; keep it quick and neutral. Correct by practicing the sequence l-uh-GZHUR-ee-uhs with the zh-sound kept short and the final -əs relaxed.
US tends to have a strong second syllable with a zh (ʒ) quality in -gious, and a clearer /ɜː/ or /ɪə/ depending on speaker. UK often preserves a more rounded vowel in the /juə/ or /jʊə/ transition and a crisper final -əs. Australian tends to flatter the /jʊə/ or /jɔː/ sequence with a slightly flatter vowels, but keeps rhoticity limited. Overall, the zh-like middle sound remains the anchor, with vowel length and rhoticity shaping the difference.
The difficulty lies in balancing the zh-like /ʒ/ sound after the initial consonants, the multi-syllable stress pattern (secondary stress around the third syllable in some habits) and the final -ious cluster which can morph into /ɪəs/ or /juəs/. Getting the sequence l-uh-zh-oo-ree-əs smooth requires careful mouth positioning: a soft palate drop, a relaxed jaw, and keeping the tongue forward for the zh sound before the /ɪ/ vowel.
Luxurious pronunciations are fully phonetic in standard English; there are no silent letters in the core phonetic sequence l-uh-ɡ-zh-oo-ree-əs. The challenge is not letter silence but the blending of the /ʒ/ (zh) with the following vowel and keeping the final -əs unstressed. Focus on the zh + vowel bridge and a quick, light final /əs/ to avoid a heavy last syllable.
🗣️ Voice search tip: These questions are optimized for voice search. Try asking your voice assistant any of these questions about "Luxurious"!
- Shadowing: Listen to a 15–20 second clip of a native speaker saying Luxurious and repeat in real time, matching intonation and the zh-phoneme. - Minimal pairs: luxurious vs luxuriously (note the -ly adds a syllable) or luxurious vs luxuriousness; focus on stress. - Rhythm: Practice dividing into beats: Luh-zhur-ee-us; count 2-3-4 to align stress with the second syllable. - Stress practice: Place primary stress on the second syllable; practice with finger taps on syllables. - Recording: Record yourself saying Luxurious alongside a native speaker and compare intonation, volume, and the zh sound. - Context sentences: Use two sentences with different speeds to master natural pronunciation.
No related words found