It's the word of the day for December 14th.
Today's word is multitudinous, spelled M-U-L-T-I-T-U-D.
I-N-O-U-S.
Multitudinous is an adjective.
It's a formal word with meanings that relate to multitudes.
It can mean existing in a great multitude, that is, very many,
or including a multitude of individuals,
or existing in or consisting of innumerable elements or aspects.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Forbes by Natasha Gourau.
launched as Holton's artistic inquiry into his own Chinese heritage.
The project has evolved into a profound examination of family dynamics, migration,
and cultural hybridity in contemporary New York, where the American identity is multitudinous.
I am large.
I contain multitudes.
So wrote Walt Whitman in his most celebrated poem, Song of Myself.
He was expressing his ability to hold within himself contradictory statements,
facets, opinions, or beliefs.
Another, if less poetic way of saying, I contain multitudes might be, I am multitudinous,
using the sense of that five-syllable word meaning existing in or consisting of innumerable elements or aspects.
Multitudinous doesn't have a lot of meanings, three to be exact, but each one concerns, well, A lot.