multitudinousness


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  • noun

Words related to multitudinousness

a very large number (especially of people)

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Finally face to face with god, this Shakespeare, craving release from prodigious multitudinousness into self-possession, into singleness of identity, hears only the Lord's answer from a whirlwind confessing that "Neither am I anyone; I have dreamt the world as you dreamt your work, my Shakespeare, and among the forms in my dream are you, who like myself are many and no one" (Yates, Irby 284).
(Kristen Bluemel has examined her drawings, which Smith's publishers often balked at reproducing, as similarly political.) But Huk and Severin do not agree on the meaning of Smith's multitudinousness. For Huk, Severin's political reading ignores the complex relationships of texts within texts ("Misplacing" 516-19).
So, too, Murray Baumgarten sees Dickens' experiences of the city (attractive-repulsive multitudinousness) as transformative.
Because of their multitudinousness, I will name this 'Pavilion of Ten Thousand Rocks'," The elders then said: "How excellent is our lord's naming of the pavilion!
In conventional prose `and' would normally signal the end of a list, but here, no sooner has Wordsworth thought to end it than some other facet of nature's multitudinousness occurs to him.
In this respect, we have been extremely successful; the diversity of approaches and modes of investigation our contributors have employed in their essays clearly showcases what Elizabeth Barrett Browning would call the multitudinousness of Victorian prosody.