Meaning
A prodigy is a person, especially a young one, who has exceptional talent, ability, or intelligence in a particular field. It can also refer to something extraordinary or impressive.
Grammar and Usage
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Part of speech: Noun
-
Countable: Yes (
a prodigy
,two prodigies
) -
Common usage:
- "X is a prodigy at [field/skill]"
- "A child prodigy" = a young person with exceptional skill.
Common Phrases
- child prodigy – a young person with outstanding ability
- musical prodigy – someone very talented in music at an early age
- math prodigy – a young person exceptionally skilled in mathematics
Collocations
- adjective + prodigy: young prodigy, remarkable prodigy, natural prodigy
- noun + prodigy: child prodigy, music prodigy, chess prodigy
- verb + prodigy: considered a prodigy, hailed as a prodigy
Examples
- Mozart was a famous child prodigy in music.
- The young chess prodigy defeated international grandmasters.
- She was hailed as a prodigy after publishing her first novel at age 15.
- The school takes pride in nurturing prodigies in science and art.
- At just 10 years old, he was considered a math prodigy.
- The coach said the new player is a football prodigy.
- People were amazed at the prodigy’s ability to memorize entire books.
- A musical prodigy often requires special training to reach their full potential.
Synonyms or Related
- genius
- wonder child
- mastermind
- phenomenon
- virtuoso