Myriad in a sentence as a noun

"It's just one tiny thing in a myriad list of things to know.

There were a myriad of problems \n which conspired to corrupt your reason and rob you of your \n common sense.

Anyone with enough drive and motivation these days can learn almost anything with the myriad of resources out there.

" The same could've been said for legalization of opioids and a myriad of other medications that have much more severe side-effects.

Maybe some people love learning the myriad of keyboard shortcuts needed to get stuff done on a Mac, but I prefer Ubuntu, I can get stuff done a lot faster and without wanting to **** myself.

Myriad in a sentence as an adjective

In the last decade, we got portable access to all of human information, the ability to always know where we are, advancements in electronics, cars and all sorts of myriad incredible things.

The reasons are myriad but usually it comes down to prestige: for example, among couriers there is a longstanding weekly and monthly competition between groups that prove their chops by trying to dominate each other.

Apparently, the Canadian government is working on their own, and I don't think it will be long before other central banks begin to follow suit by adapting the bitcoin protocol for their own purposes and presumably solving some of its myriad problems in the process.

When you're talking to engineers and you write this big setup paragraph about how much work it was just to share a git repo, and all of us are familiar with the myriad of hosting options, it just makes you look like you either don't know about your competition or you're hoping we don't.

On top of actually being a useful educational tool, there are a ton of other boxes to check in order to get any kind of technology into the classroom:* Compliance with the myriad of federal, state, and local laws surrounding education procurement, student data, what can and can't happen on government property and around children, and cash-strapped educational IT departments.

Myriad definitions

noun

a large indefinite number; "he faced a myriad of details"

noun

the cardinal number that is the product of ten and one thousand

See also: 10000

adjective

too numerous to be counted; "incalculable riches"; "countless hours"; "an infinite number of reasons"; "innumerable difficulties"; "the multitudinous seas"; "myriad stars"; "untold thousands"