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myriad
[mir-ee-uhd]
noun
a very great or indefinitely great number of persons or things.
ten thousand.
myriad
/ ˈmɪrɪəd /
adjective
innumerable
noun
(also used in plural) a large indefinite number
archaic, ten thousand
Other Word Forms
- myriadly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of myriad1
Word History and Origins
Origin of myriad1
Example Sentences
Anchored by extensive conversations with the director Martin Scorsese, it is a five-hour, five-part contemplation of an extraordinary career and the myriad forces — personal, cultural, spiritual — that drove, and occasionally threatened to derail, it.
The answer to which theory is correct, as of now, is a mystery, but it's one Muñoz will be hard at work solving with myriad modeling techniques.
The country's myriad conflicts are adding to existing pressures on hunger and food inflation.
While the great soul men often led with a single, potent lead vocal, D’Angelo split his voice into myriad lines on “Voodoo,” stacking lavish parts like pieces in a Jenga tower.
This three-year rally has overcome the headwinds of high interest rates, recession warnings, tariff and political uncertainty, and myriad regional conflicts that would have stopped virtually every other bull market dead in its tracks.
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