multifarious
English
Etymology
From Latin multifārius.
Pronunciation
Adjective
multifarious (comparative more multifarious, superlative most multifarious)
- Having great diversity or variety; of various kinds; made up of many differing parts; manifold.
- 1943 January and February, “Charles S. Lake”, in Railway Magazine, page 1:
- Now, it is our regretful task to record his death on November 19 after a brief illness, and to include in a short article on page 29 some notes on his multifarious activities.
- 2005, Plato, Sophist (translation by Lesley Brown), 225c.
- It is divided into parts that are too small and multifarious.
- (law, of lawsuits) In which a party or a cause of action has been improperly or wrongfully joined together in the same suit, as in a misjoinder,[1] perhaps as a result of a joinder of unrelated, distinct, independent parties or matters.
Synonyms
- (having great diversity or variety;): diverse, various; See also Thesaurus:heterogeneous
Derived terms
Translations
having multiplicity
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