Myriad

来自Big Physics

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mid 16th century (in myriad (sense 2 of the noun)): via late Latin from Greek murias, muriad-, from murioi ‘10,000’.


Ety img myriad.png

wiktionary

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From French myriade, from Late Latin myriadis (genitive of myrias), from Ancient Greek μυριάδος(muriádos), genitive of μυριάς(muriás, “number of 10,000”), from μυρίος(muríos, “numberless, countless, infinite”).


etymonline

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myriad (n.)

1550s, "the number of 10,000," also "an indefinitely great number," from French myriade and directly from Late Latin myrias (genitive myriadis) "ten thousand," from Greek myrias (genitive myriados) "a number of ten thousand; countless numbers," from myrios (plural myrioi) "innumerable, countless, infinite; boundless," as a definite number, "ten thousand" ("the greatest number in Greek expressed by one word," Liddell & Scott say), of unknown origin; perhaps from PIE *meue- "abundant" (source also of Hittite muri- "cluster of grapes," Latin muto "penis," Middle Irish moth "penis"). Beekes offers "no etymology." The numerically specific use is usually in translations from Greek or Latin.




myriad (adj.)

"numberless, multitudinous," c. 1800, from myriad (n.).