What's the difference between legion and manifold?

Legion


Definition:

  • (n.) A body of foot soldiers and cavalry consisting of different numbers at different periods, -- from about four thousand to about six thousand men, -- the cavalry being about one tenth.
  • (n.) A military force; an army; military bands.
  • (n.) A great number; a multitude.
  • (n.) A group of orders inferior to a class.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Over the past 50 years, composer Steve Reich’s music has had a powerful impact – not only on the contemporary classical world, but also on legions of rock, pop, hip-hop, jazz, and electronic musicians.
  • (2) Until she was 14 or so Clare was just as devout, going to mass each morning, joining the Legion of Mary, visiting old ladies.
  • (3) The ex-comic ruled out giving a crucial confidence vote in parliament to a centre-left government and reiterated that the M5S's new legion of deputies and senators would vote on laws on a case-by-case basis.
  • (4) Next his wife, Jay Z isn't much a dancer, and when the tempo upped, he respectfully exited, letting her lead her Beyhive legions through their hip-shaking glory.
  • (5) How badly does he have to play before his legions of cheerleaders in the media will put down their pom-poms and pass comment on it?
  • (6) The cross will now move to the Royal British Legion’s national memorial arboretum in Staffordshire.
  • (7) Seann, how do you deal with the legions of female fans you attract?
  • (8) Protecting the poor and the vulnerable is crucial to the phasing down of these subsidies, but the multiple economic, social and environmental benefits are long and legion.” graph Barack Obama and the G20 nations called for an end to fossil fuel subsidies in 2009, but little progress had been made until oil prices fell in 2014.
  • (9) Ben Rubin hasn’t had much sleep over the last few days, and his legions of newly acquired fans have noticed.
  • (10) The obsession of "For Fatherland and Freedom" to pay public homage to the Latvian-SS Legion in contradiction to all historical logic and sensitivity to Nazi crimes is not a product of ostensibly harmless nostalgia as Pickles would have us believe, but part of a rather insidious plan to gain recognition for a perversely distorted version of European history which will officially equate Communism with Nazism.
  • (11) In 2002 he was seen dangling Prince Michael II from the balcony of a hotel room while legions of photographers watched in horror below.
  • (12) In human diseases we are rarely able to obtain data at precisely the same time point in the course of the disease even among patients in the same study, and possible confounding variables present are legion.
  • (13) Therefore there is no reason to claim that there were any direct links between the legion and the war crimes previously committed by military or paramilitary organisations.
  • (14) Nestling beneath the craggy wall of Fort Saint-Jean, a 17th-century stronghold that once housed the Foreign Legion, the squat glass building is shielded from the harsh Mediterranean sun by a dark filigree veil.
  • (15) Mostly, these legions of the displaced are heading for Europe .
  • (16) Aldi has vowed to maintain the supermarket price war that has drawn legions of cost-conscious shoppers to its aisles as it announced a 65% increase in its UK profits.
  • (17) Japan's legions of salaried workers have more reason than most to give in to the urge for an afternoon nap.
  • (18) In just three weeks Richard Harries, the former Bishop of Oxford, has set up a Commission on Civil Society , which has already held emergency hearings on the bill all round the UK, backed by Christian Aid, Women's Institutes, the Countryside Alliance, 38 Degrees , Oxfam, vegans, Quakers, the British Legion and scores more.
  • (19) A total of 2858 randomly selected American Legion members who had served in Southeast Asia completed a questionnaire which elicited information on military service, personal health, and a variety of mental health outcomes.
  • (20) He has also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Congressional Gold Medal and the Legion of Honour.

Manifold


Definition:

  • (a.) Various in kind or quality; many in number; numerous; multiplied; complicated.
  • (a.) Exhibited at divers times or in various ways; -- used to qualify nouns in the singular number.
  • (n.) A copy of a writing made by the manifold process.
  • (n.) A cylindrical pipe fitting, having a number of lateral outlets, for connecting one pipe with several others.
  • (n.) The third stomach of a ruminant animal.
  • (v. t.) To take copies of by the process of manifold writing; as, to manifold a letter.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Combined hypertension treatment with inhibitors of the converting enzyme (ICE) and diuretocs gives manifold advantages, the most important of them is a synergistic action of both drugs resulting in blood pressure decrease and prevention of hypokaliaemia.
  • (2) It is stressed that the exact anatomical diagnosis requires the examination of every segment which can be performed only by using manifold planes.
  • (3) An anaerobic sampling manifold withdrew 19 samples of blood during the rest-to-exercise transition; sampling interval was usually 4 s. Blood gas analysis showed that, on average, from rest-to-steady-state exercise, O2 saturation (Svo2) fell from 71 to 41% and mixed venous PCO2 (PvCO2) rose from 42 to 59 Torr.
  • (4) These induction periods are regarded as the time needed by far-from-equilibrium fluctuations to drive the system into the center manifold.
  • (5) The apparent Km of the modified enzyme for soluble starch increased manifold, thus implicating the sensitive tryptophan residue in the substrate binding region of the enzyme.
  • (6) All image vectors were orthonormalized to span a linear manifold.
  • (7) A manifold for rapid determination of fluoride has been designed that uses a single coil for complex formation and extraction.
  • (8) Impinger samples were collected from the sampling manifold and analyzed accordingly.
  • (9) This manifold can be used to validate or calibrate various industrial hygiene analyses such as charcoal and detector tube technology, impinger techniques, respirator cartridge testing, and various survey instruments.
  • (10) The presentation of SAS may be manifold, and the primary health care teams play a crucial role in the detection of their basic symptoms.
  • (11) The modification can be made in less than 4 h without the need for any additional parts; the modified manifold requires one-third fewer pump lines and fewer reagents, thus reducing operating costs and simplifying instrument maintenance, while retaining the same precision, speed, low carryover, and linearity of the production model.
  • (12) The low-field temperature dependence of the MCD of oxidized FdI, which originates in the paramagnetic oxidized [3Fe-4S]1+ cluster, establishes the absence of a significant population of excited electronic states of this cluster up to 60 K. The low-field temperature dependence of the MCD of reduced FdI establishes that the ground-state manifold of the reduced [3Fe-4S]0 cluster possesses S greater than or equal to 2 at both pH 6.0 and 8.3.
  • (13) The appearance of this disease as generalized vasculitis is conditioned by the manifold clinical symptomatology and thus renders the diagnostics extraordinarily difficult.
  • (14) After certain modifications had been made in the manifold, satisfactory degrees of accuracy were also obtained for the erythrocyte counts.
  • (15) Among the manifold immunologic events which take place during parasitic invasions, production of autoantibodies and immune complexes can play a serious role during infections with African and American trypanosomes.
  • (16) There are manifold specific causes of death characterized by conditions manifest in middle and late life.
  • (17) It is now customary practice to couple separately metered infusions via a manifold to a common catheter that enters the patient.
  • (18) The differential diagnoses was manifold because of the traveling habits, the clinical symptomatic and the course of the disease.
  • (19) Their information must be transduced through binding to membrane receptors, so as to elicit the appropriate biological response from the manifold repertoire of a cell.
  • (20) The enzyme can be seen as strategically located to play a role in regenerating ATP required for the manifold activities of the synaptic membrane.