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Many   /mˈɛni/   Listen
Many

adjective
1.
A quantifier that can be used with count nouns and is often preceded by 'as' or 'too' or 'so' or 'that'; amounting to a large but indefinite number.  "The temptations are many" , "A good many" , "A great many" , "Many directions" , "Take as many apples as you like" , "Too many clouds to see" , "Never saw so many people"  Antonym: few.



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"Many" Quotes from Famous Books



... resorting to it as a means of settling disputes. Just how this can be remedied I am not prepared to say, although possibly the international support of all arbitral tribunals might be provided. At any rate, I feel that something should be done to relieve the great expense which now prevents many of the smaller nations ...
— The Peace Negotiations • Robert Lansing

... Old Man kept on, travelling north. Many of the animals that he had made followed him as he went. The animals understood him when he spoke to them, and he used them as his servants. When he got to the north point of the Porcupine Mountains, there he made some more mud images of people, and blew breath upon them, and they became ...
— Blackfoot Lodge Tales • George Bird Grinnell

... amount borrowed, with interest, are, in reality, in the amount of the principal alone, returning a percentage of value greater than they received—more than in equity they contracted to pay, and oftentimes more, in substance, than they profited by the loan. To the man of business this percentage in many cases constitutes the difference between success and failure. Thus a shrinkage in the volume of money is the prolific source of bankruptcy and ruin. It is the canker that, unperceived and unsuspected, is eating out the prosperity of our people. By ...
— American Eloquence, Volume IV. (of 4) - Studies In American Political History (1897) • Various

... New Zealand] they passed many huts and a considerable hippah, or fortified place, on a high round hill, from the neighbourhood of which six large canoes were ...
— A Dictionary of Austral English • Edward Morris

... fuer prot. Theol., i. p. 352: "And now let me ask whether a document of this kind presenting, as it does, a picture of the history, land distribution, and sacrificial rites of Israel, as a whole, which in so many particulars departs from the actual truth, can belong to a time in which Israel clung to what was traditional ...
— Prolegomena to the History of Israel • Julius Wellhausen


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