Dictionary Definition
myriad adj : too numerous to be counted;
"incalculable riches"; "countless hours"; "an infinite number of
reasons"; "innumerable difficulties"; "the multitudinous seas";
"myriad stars"; "untold thousands" [syn: countless, infinite, innumerable, innumerous, myriad(a),
multitudinous,
numberless, uncounted, unnumberable, unnumbered, unnumerable]
Noun
1 a large indefinite number; "he faced a myriad
of details"
2 the cardinal number that is the product of ten
and one thousand [syn: ten
thousand, 10000]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From myriade, from myrias (genitive of myriadis), from μυριάδος (myriados), genitive of μυριάς (myrias) "number of 10,000", from μύριος (myrios) "numberless, countless, infinite".Adjective
myriad- Great in number; innumerable.
- The myriad stars were impossible to count.
Translations
Noun
- Ten thousand.
- A vast diversity or number.
- Earth hosts a myriad of animals.
Translations
ten thousand
- Aramaic:
- Syriac: ܪܒܘܬܐ (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- Hebrew: רבותא (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- Syriac: ܪܒܘܬܐ (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- German: Myriade
- Japanese: 万 (まん,“man”)
- Vietnamese: vạn
a vast diversity or number
- Aramaic:
- Syriac: ܪܒܘܬܐ (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- Hebrew: רבותא (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- Syriac: ܪܒܘܬܐ (rebōthā, rebōtho)
- Dutch: een groot aantal
- Finnish: suunnaton määrä, myriadi, lukematon määrä
- German: Unmenge, Myriaden
- Icelandic: mýgrútur, urmull, ótal, ógrynni, aragrúi
- Spanish: miríada
Extensive Definition
Myriad is a classical Greek name
for the number 104 =
10,000. In
modern English
the word refers to an unspecified large quantity.
The term myriad is a progression in the commonly
used system of describing numbers using tens and hundreds. Small
numbers are named in terms of number of tens plus the remainder;
for example 76 is seven tens plus six. Numbers larger than ten tens
require a new description, a hundred. Thus, 1776 is seventeen
hundred seventy six. Similarly one hundred hundred is a myriad. A
myriad myriad, or one hundred million, was left as the largest
named number by the Ancient
Greeks and is also the largest named number in the Bible.
A myriad is primarily a singular cardinal number;
just as the "thousand" in "four thousand" is singular (one does not
write "four thousands people") the word myriad is used in the same
way: "there are four myriad people outside". When used as a noun,
meaning "a large number", it follows the same rules as that phrase.
However, that is not the case originally in Greek,
where there is plural.
In English, the term "myriad" is most commonly
used to refer to a large number of an unspecified size. In this way
"myriad" can be used as either a noun or an adjective. Thus both
"there are myriad people outside" and "There is a myriad of people
outside" are correct.
Merriam-Webster notes, "Recent criticism of the
use of myriad as a noun, both in the plural form myriads and in the
phrase a myriad of, seems to reflect a mistaken belief that the
word was originally and is still properly only an adjective....
however, the noun is in fact the older form, dating to the 16th
century. The noun myriad has appeared in the works of such writers
as Milton (plural myriads) and Thoreau (a myriad of), and it
continues to occur frequently in reputable English. There is no
reason to avoid it."
Chinese, Japanese and Korean also have words for
a myriad squared (100,000,000): yi4(億) or wan4wan4(萬萬) in ancient
texts, oku (億), and eok (억/億)(pronounced "ohk"), respectively. A
myriad cubed (10,000³ or 1012) is a zhao4 (兆); cho (兆); a myriad to
the fourth power (10,0004 or 1016) is a jing1 (京); kei (京).
Conversely, Chinese, Japanese and Korean do not have single words
for a thousand squared, cubed, etc., unlike English and many other
languages of European origin.
The English numbering system divides large
numbers into groups of three digits, and so the names for such
numbers follow this division (10,000 = ten thousand).
East Asian numbering divides large numbers into groups of four; so
in Chinese, Japanese, or Korean, 30,000 really would be "three
myriad" (3 0000 — Japanese san-man). One million is a hundred
myriad (100 x 10000 instead of 1000 x 1000); the next uniquely
named number after a myriad is 億, which is myriad myriad (10000 x
10000) or a hundred million.
Modern Greek still uses the word "myriad" by
itself, but also to form the word for million. The word for million
is ekatommyrio (hundred myriad — εκατομμύριο); one thousand million is
disekatommyrio (twice hundred myriad — δισεκατομμύριο).
The largest number named in Ancient
Greek was a myriad myriad and Archimedes of
Syracuse used this quantity as the basis for a numeration
system of large powers of ten, which he needed to count grains of
sand, see The Sand
Reckoner.
There is only slight indication that "myria" has
at all been used as a metric prefix for 10,000, e.g., 10 kilometres = 1 myriametre. It does not have
official status as an SI
prefix.
In Sweden and Norway, one mile
= 10,000 metres = one myriametre. Before they went metric, one
Swedish mile was 10,688 metres and a Norwegian mile was 11,295
metres, so only a small change had to be made to the old mile to
makes them equal to one myriametre. Even today, Swedes frequently
use the Swedish mile to refer to travel distances in everyday
language. Similarly, one myriometre =
0.000 1 metre.
In Great Britain, the Ordnance
Survey use the term myriad
to refer to a 100 km x 100 km area in the
National Grid.
References
myriad in German: Myriade
myriad in Spanish: Miríada
myriad in Dutch: Myriade
myriad in Japanese: 10000
myriad in Norwegian Nynorsk: Myriade
myriad in Polish: Miriada
myriad in Russian: Мириада
myriad in Contenese: 萬
myriad in Chinese: 萬
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
G, M, a billion, a crore, a lakh, a
million, a myriad, a nonillion, a quadrillion, a thousand, a
zillion, abundance,
affluence, ample
sufficiency, ampleness, amplitude, avalanche, billion, bonanza, bountifulness, bountiousness, bumper
crop, chiliad, chiliagon, chiliahedron, chiliarch, chiliarchia, considerable, copiousness, ever so many,
extravagance,
exuberance, fertility, flood, flow, foison, full many, full measure,
fullness, generosity, generousness, grand, great abundance, great
plenty, gush, heaped-up,
jillion, kilo, kilocycle, kilogram, kilohertz, kiloliter, kilometer, lakh, landslide, lavishness, liberality, liberalness, lots, luxuriance, many, maximum, millennium, millepede, milligram, milliliter, million, more than enough,
much, multifarious, multifold, multiple, multitudinal, multitudinous, myriads, no few, not a few,
numerous, numerousness, one hundred
thousand, opulence,
opulency, outpouring, overflow, plenitude, plenteousness, plentifulness, plenty, prevalence, prodigality, productiveness, profuseness, profusion, quantities, quite some,
repleteness,
repletion, rich
harvest, rich vein, richness, riot, riotousness, scads, shower, spate, stream, substantiality, substantialness,
superabundance,
teemingness, ten
thousand, thou, thousand, very many, wealth, yard, zillion