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det

many

MEH-nee
det
1
A large but unspecified number of (used with countable nouns).
"Many people showed up to the protest."
"There aren't many seats left."
pron
1
A large number of people or things.
"Many of the guests left early."

How to Use Many

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishUsed before countable things to mean "a lot of" — as opposed to "much," which is used for uncountable things.

Common mistake

Use "many" with countable nouns (many books) and "much" with uncountable nouns (much water) — mixing them up is one of the most common English learner errors.

Easily confused with
Common pairings
so many as many as too many

Word Forms

more comparative, more comparative, manies plural, Manys plural, most superlative, most superlative

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Fill the Gap

Can you complete this real example?

_____ people showed up to the protest.

Etymology

From Old English maniġ, ultimately from a Proto-Germanic root meaning "many" or "much" — related to similar words across most Germanic languages.

Antonyms

few

Related Words

Rhymes for many

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial