This is for all the Humber grads (up to #5 now) who keep telling me the same damn, and very tired, story about the use of the word 'myriad' and have no clue - that with a little research called "looking in the dictionary" - they would realize that both they and their professor, are actually only half right.
Which also means you are half-wrong.
Please take your severely low-grade language snobbery somewhere else please.
MYR-I-AD
poetic/literary
noun
1 - a countless or extremely great number: networks connecting a myriad of computers.
2 - (chiefly in classical history) a unit of ten thousand.
adjective
countless or extremely great in number: the myriad lights of the city.
- having countless or very many elements or aspects: the myriad political scene.
ORIGIN
mid 16th cent. (sense 2 of the noun): via late Latin from Greek murias, muriad, from murioi '10,000'
USAGE
Myriad is derived from Greek noun and adjective meaning 'ten thousand'. It was first used in English as a noun in reference to a great but indefinite number. The adjectival sense of 'countless, innumerable' appeared much later. In modern English, use of myriad as a noun and adjective are equally standard and correct, despite the fact that some traditionalists consider the adjective as the only acceptable use of the word.
Showing posts with label Humber grads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Humber grads. Show all posts
Monday, May 12, 2008
myriad
Apparent Ideas
Humber grads,
myriad,
right,
wrong
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