What's the difference between multitudinary and multitudinous?
Multitudinary
Definition:
(a.) Multitudinous.
Example Sentences:
(1) A female patient with a protracted history of multitudinary symptoms more recently developed granulomatous cheilitis (GC) and underwent extensive investigations.
Multitudinous
Definition:
(a.) Consisting of a multitude; manifold in number or condition; as, multitudinous waves.
(a.) Of or pertaining to a multitude.
Example Sentences:
(1) Treatment approaches are multitudinous and sometimes conflicting, partly due to problems in definition of the disorder, and the role of psychoanalysis is still unclear.
(2) Fluorocitrate, a Krebs cycle inhibitor, induices neurons to rapidly expel multitudinous lysosomes, mitochondria, and other cytoplasmic constituents into their axons.
(3) These GC actions could be secondary to their multitudinous peripheral actions.
(4) Lager – which, say its multitudinous fans, has a crisper, cleaner taste than warm-brewed ales – was first made by monks in Bavaria 500 years ago, using a yeast that has since been shown to be a hybrid of European yeast and another yeast.
(5) In this paper the authors present a review of the multitudinous studies of researchers who have attempted to identify the sources of drug information utilized by physicians.
(6) The variety of nasal deformities of congenital, developmental, and traumatic origin is multitudinous.
(7) Since its discovery, ANF has provided multitudinous opportunities to explore its relationship to various biologic functions.
(8) The fine cellular structure of both species showed multitudinous plasma membrane folds on their surfaces.
(9) Even more than a national treasure, Ken was a local hero, the boy who grew up cycling between the multitudinous cinemas of Southampton, and who went on to become the area's most celebrated son.
(10) In the case of the autogenous graft generally smaller, and in the case of homologous composite flexor tendon graft more multitudinous adhesions occurred between flexor tendon and tendon sheath.
(11) Although the influences of temperature on plants are multitudinous, many can be predicted, or at least analysed, based on well-established physical principles.
(12) The mood of Thoreau is more interior; the eye is not on an audience but on a multitudinous world of sensation, seen and named with precision.
(13) It was the worst violence to hit France since the second world war – a stunning act of organised multitudinous terror.
(14) The common origin of the multitudinous RV serotypes so suggested is consistent with the extensive antigenic cross-relations which are becoming evident.
(15) Such a multitudinous and concomitant expression of antigenicity to the different tumor elements indicates a close relationship to its mesodermal Müllerian origin, and NSE, S 100 and vimentin might be most adequate indicators of these types of tumors.
(16) Last year the author Tom Bower brought out a critical biography, in spite of the worst that Branson's multitudinous lawyers could do none of whom has yet managed to land a glove on the book.
(17) Arthropoda form the most diversified and multitudinous phyllum of the animal kingdom.
(18) Multitudinous embryonic macrocommunication and microcommunication between the arterial and venous systems, with resultant shunting of blood to the low-resistance veins, produce massive venous and tissue engorgement.
(19) Five cases involving the terminal ileum or colon had a gross appearance of multitudinous mucosal polyps and were considered to represent examples of "multiple lymphomatous polyposis."
(20) Heaven forbid that the multitudinous poor should also have somewhere beautiful and uplifting in which to swim and relax.