Search results
- Dictionarymyriad/ˈmɪrɪəd/
noun
- 1. a countless or extremely great number of people or things: "myriads of insects danced around the light above my head"
- 2. (chiefly in classical history) a unit of ten thousand: "the army was organized on a decimal system, up to divisions of 10,000 or myriads"
adjective
- 1. countless or extremely great in number: "he gazed at the myriad lights of the city"
Powered by Oxford Dictionaries
MYRIAD definition: 1. a very large number of something: 2. very large in number, or having great variety: 3. a very…. Learn more.
The meaning of MYRIAD is ten thousand. How to use myriad in a sentence. Did you know? Is myriad a noun?: Usage Guide
MYRIAD meaning: 1. a very large number of something: 2. very large in number, or having great variety: 3. a very…. Learn more.
Myriad means having a large number or great variety. ...British pop and culture in all its myriad forms. ...the myriad tiny animals and plants living in the ice.
myriad. noun [ C ] literary. Digital technology resulted in a myriad of (= many) new TV channels. (Definition of myriad from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
1. Constituting a very large, indefinite number; innumerable: the myriad fish in the ocean. 2. Composed of numerous diverse elements or facets: the myriad life of the metropolis. n. 1. A large, indefinite number: a myriad of microorganisms in the pond; myriads of stars in the galaxy. 2. Archaic Ten thousand.
A myriad is a lot of something. If you’re talking about Ancient Greece, a myriad is ten thousand, but today you can use the word in myriad other ways. Myriad comes from the Greek myrioi, the word for ten thousand, or less specifically, a countless amount.