Spoken like someone with a limited definition of the word massive.
I'll let you argue with the dictionary:
http://www.aolsvc.merriam-webster.ao...ionary/massive
Main Entry: mas·sive
Pronunciation: \ˈma-siv\
Function: adjective
Etymology: Middle English massiffe, from Anglo-French mascif, alteration of massiz, from Vulgar Latin *massicius, from Latin massa mass
Date: 15th century
1: forming or consisting of a large mass: a: bulky b: weighty , heavy <massive walls> <a massive volume> c: impressively large or ponderous d: having no regular form but not necessarily lacking crystalline structure <massive sandstone>
2 a: large, solid, or heavy in structure <massive jaw> b: large in scope or degree <the feeling of frustration, of being ineffectual, is massive — David Halberstam> c (1): large in comparison to what is typical <a massive dose of penicillin> (2): being extensive and severe <massive hemorrhage> <massive collapse of a lung> (3): imposing in excellence or grandeur : monumental <massive simplicity>
3: having mass <a massive boson>
— mas·sive·ly adverb
— mas·sive·ness noun