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Usenet Posted 17 years ago
Usage

Myriad Something / Myriad of Something

In the Irish Catholic sex/physical abuse scandal, for some reason the word "myriad" keeps appearing.
One article, "Ireland's myriad religious orders, much like their mother church, "
Another article, " but at least it has survived the myriad legal and political challenges "
Another, "Many have found a myriad of ways to remain in denial. Just a few bad apples, they say. "
Another, "The Ryan report cites a myriad of serious charges "

Okay, 2 for "of", 2 for none. Which is correct? I think that myriad is a synonym for "many", and thus "of" doesn't belong. Or does myriad really mean "an assortment", for which "of" is correct?
  

Top answer

Sorry, you folks covered this topic less than a year ago. I guess the conclusion was that both uses are correct.

  • Sorry, you folks covered this topic less than a year ago.
  • I guess the conclusion was that both uses are correct.
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5 Answers
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Sorry, you folks covered this topic less than a year ago. I guess the conclusion was that both uses are correct.
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[nq:1]Sorry, you folks covered this topic less than a year ago. I guess the conclusion was that both uses are correct.[/nq]
I didn't see what was posted a year ago. So here I go, sticking my head in the lion's mouth perhaps: "Myriad" is Greek for 10,000. That suggests to me that
"Ireland's myriad religious orders, much like their mother church, "
is the way to go and
"The Ryan repo
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[nq:2]Sorry, you folks covered this topic less than a year ago. I guess the conclusion was that both uses are correct.[/nq]
[nq:1]I didn't see what was posted a year ago. So here I go, sticking my head in the lion's mouth ... the way to go and "The Ryan report cites a myriad of serious charges " shows ignorance and is incorrect.[/nq]
The senses and uses of "myriad", noun and adjective, are
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[nq:2]I didn't see what was posted a year ago. So ... myriad of serious charges " shows ignorance and is incorrect.[/nq]
[nq:1]The senses and uses of "myriad", noun and adjective, are no longer limited to its original meaning of "10,000".[/nq]
Sure. i didn't mean to imply that, in English usage, we are obliged to limit ourselves to 10,000. Many times, a foreign word is imported and quickly
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I omitted all quotations. Here are some from the A.2b section:
1609 A. CRAIG Poet. Recreations sig. A4v, Thus feeling ill, andfearing worse each day, A miriad of mis-fortunes I embrace. ....

1828 J. STERLING Ess. & Tales (1848) II. 4 The wide and gleamingriver..fleckered with a myriad of keels.

1850 F. W. ROBERTSON Serm. 3rd Ser. x. 124 A myriad of differentuniverses.
...

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