Dictionary
is multifarious
adjective
Having multiplicity; having great diversity or variety; of various kinds; diversified; made up of many differing parts; manifold.
Exact(17)
What "exists" in hallucinatory experience is multifarious.
The magic of Shakespeare is multifarious and sprawling; they've got lots of working parts, and at least some of the parts are likely to work.
"Boston Black," the brainchild of Joanne Jones-Rizzi, the museum's director of community programs and partnerships, playfully presents the idea that blackness is multifarious: many voices, many faces, many hairdos.
The colors, drab and secondhand, are applied with a touch that is multifarious, the figures flat-footed, disconnected one from the next, as if pasted together from difference places.
It is multifarious: it holds within it all aspects of human endeavour from the high-minded to the trivial, from the Proms and Panorama to Jeremy Clarkson and Ja'mie: Private School Girl, with the stated, though not always lived-up-to intent that whatever it does it must do well.
The composition of tobacco is multifarious.
Similar(42)
His crimes against music have been multifarious.
Urban's involvements in church affairs were multifarious.
The strands of his own legacy have been multifarious, and are still developing.
The links between leaving school and child labour are multifarious, but poverty plainly drives both.
Drinks are multifarious: beers are from £2.80 a pint upwards, or go native with a Westons cider for £2.20.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com