From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishveritablever‧i‧ta‧ble /ˈverətəbəl/ adjective [only before noun] formal EMPHASIZEa word used to emphasize a description of someone or something SYN real The area is a veritable paradise for those who love walking and swimming.
Examples from the Corpus
veritable• But to Paula Ladies' Fashions was a veritable Aladdin's cave of delights.• The temple of the Sun at Cuzco appeared a veritable gold-mine to the impatient conquerors.• The studio was a veritable Land of Song, exemplified by the ever-popular programme of that name.• This painting has become a veritable obsession and he has returned to it repeatedly over the past thirty years.• The male bird is a veritable rainbow of colors.• He stared into a veritable sea of smiling faces.• This meant all the leftovers had to be frozen in a veritable stack of containers.Origin veritable (1400-1500) Old French verite; → VERITY