Simple sentence: It's a splendid day.
Compound sentence: This is a splendid hat, but it's very expensive.
Complex sentence: A picnic sounds splendid although the weather calls for rain on Friday.
Compound-Complex sentence: The museum has an exhibit that sounds splendid, but it's only for this week.
We had a splendid picnic.
after i said my sentence the teacher said it was splendid
She has such a splendid face
You teacher though your answer was splendid until she realized it was plagiarized.
I found a splendid example of why correct punctuation is important.
You use the word splendid in a sentence when you want to describe something as being nice or pleasing. For example, "I had a splendid day at the park today."
the road to recovery
The view from atop Mount Ranier are spendid.
Splendid is an adjective meaning excellent or most suitable, used to describe something, but rarely a person (UK variant). It was a splendid day for a walk. The party turned out to be a splendid affair. The cab driver turned out to be a splendid chap who knew the town well.
The theater erupted in a splendid display of tremendous applause.
This is called an exclamatory sentence (and often uses an exclamation point)!
For the word "splendid," the comparative is more splendid and the superlative is most splendid