Multitude in a sentence as a noun

There are a multitude of cloud storage solutions.

One could just as easily say farming is for insects, or flying, or a multitude of other things.

Should the entire plant workforce **** themselves?Things like nuclear meltdowns are black swan events, with a multitude of causes and guilt.

Submodule is sub-par, and requires a multitude of extra commands even in the cases that should have been seamless.

I own two checks, and they're on my rsum, but I don't think they've carried much weight, if at all, at the multitude of companies I've applied for and been at.

I've lived in the UK and I've had friends from a multitude of countries, and not one of them considers their country to be the best, unlike my American friends.

'Oh, but they should have used a distributed, redundant buzzword compliant system in a multitude of nuclear bunkers and this would never have happened'.

When the mocks are implemented, the final product is viewed on a multitude of devices with different rendering characteristics.

Neither of the graphs included support his claim, as there's a multitude of other variables that could explain their trends.\nThe second claim the author makes is that this is occurring specifically for US companies.

Windows does this when it boots up and it drives me insane -- if the OS or program isn't in a usable state when you show it to me, don't show it to meLoading speed is just one of a multitude of factors that come into play when making software.

Larger open source projects tend to be tested on a multitude of environments, with applications only deployed or built internally, there's no point because you can very accurately control your environment.

I remember reading a multitude of comments from people on various sites saying that he would rip people off with his "vulnerability reward program" but here we are, Dotcom is putting his money where his mouth is and paying out the money.

Multitude definitions

noun

a large indefinite number; "a battalion of ants"; "a multitude of TV antennas"; "a plurality of religions"

See also: battalion plurality pack

noun

a large gathering of people

See also: throng concourse

noun

the common people generally; "separate the warriors from the mass"; "power to the people"

See also: masses mass people