myriads in English

noun
1
a countless or extremely great number.
networks connecting a myriad of computers
synonyms:a multitudea large/great numbera large/great quantityscoresquantitiesa massa hostdrovesa hordelotsloadsmassesstacksscadstonshundredsthousandsmillionsgazillionsbajillions
2
(chiefly in classical history) a unit of ten thousand.
noun

Use "myriads" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "myriads" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "myriads", or refer to the context using the word "myriads" in the English Dictionary.

1. Myriads we are on myriads,

2. Myriads on myriads of brothers,

3. Myriads of Brothers

4. Each galaxy contains myriads of stars.

5. Following that, “armies of cavalry” numbering “two myriads of myriads” thunder forth.

6. The anointed witnesses and these helpers charge forth together as the innumerable cavalry, “two myriads of myriads.”

7. (b) Who are included in the myriads of powerful horses?

8. The cloudless sky was jewelled with myriads of glittering stars.

9. These myriads of fish would be enough to keep any swimmer entranced for hours.

10. Jehovah God, Jesus Christ, and myriads of angels have fixed their attention on it.

11. And among living things on earth, myriads of miracles are happening every day.

12. The millions of spirit creatures who loyally serve God are referred to as his “holy myriads.”

13. Our sun keeps on pouring out heat and energy, as do myriads of other stars.

14. Begonia 'Nonstop Orange' is an indefatigable bloomer continuously producing myriads of magnificent and huge, fully double flowers, up to 4 in

15. The eyeless sockets of the pack animals everywhere account for the myriads of ravens along the road.

16. Imagine the myriads of such infrared and other pathways and signals that the various insect species must be utilizing.

17. Shortage of water for washing, and the myriads of flies attracted to human waste, aid the dissemination of the disease.

18. Abundant, too, are creatures of the air, from powerful, soaring eagles to myriads of colorful songbirds that sweeten the air with their cheerful melodies.

19. Chirring" of the myriads of insects that haunted the bushy growth with which the whole face of the country was covered, and the occasional call of a bird.

20. Myriads of simply-structured organisms, whose ancestors began to appear some, 2,000 million years ago from among the primitive bacteria and the first algae.

21. 4 The superb organization of God’s creations is seen everywhere, not only in the visible heavens but also on earth, with its myriads of living things.

22. At the crest of the heart is a source of electricity that transmits energy down special lines, causing myriads of muscle fibers to work together.

23. God created myriads of angels to live in heaven; these spirit creatures are not humans who are deceased and who have been resurrected to life in heaven. —Psalm 104:1, 4; Daniel 7:10.

24. He proposed a number system using powers of a myriad of myriads (100 million) and concluded that the number of grains of sand required to fill the universe would be 8 vigintillion, or 8×1063.

25. Buried underneath vaults put together in Burstones concentrically to the barrels, in the interstices of which myriads of tiny gardens bloom maturing the wine where ‘the classical only exists, speaks and reigns whenever some disguised barbarian is present () »* *Pierre Michon

26. Flies and gnats swarm in millions and dance gracefully in the warm evening air , the lovely moths fly silently like angels among the sweet - scented blossoms and myriads of twinkling specks of fireflies and glow - worms add enchantment to our moonless nights .

27. Rochelle [ Dolmotov? ] and others have put forth the idea that spirit- beings reflect a kind of quality of existence, that is the different garments, skins, or barks, the different layers reflective for myriads of qualities that are associated perhaps semantically with jaguars, anacondas, rivers, etc. and even radios or shotguns.

28. In other words , the riddle of biophys - ics is to discover how the fortuitous concourse of myriads of blind and chaotic molecules while obeying the laws of physics and chemistry become ' at the same time integrated into organic wholes , capable of entropy - decreasing ani - mated activity . The problem , therefore , is to trace the very real differences in the behaviour of animate and inanimate matter to their objective foundations in some kind of spatio - temporal relationships . E . Schrodinger was the first to divine the nature of this difference when he formulated his ' order from order ' principle , which is " the real clue to the understanding of life " .