0 consisting of many things or parts:
It inserts its multitudinous references and citations into them (social models, cultural mores, personal factors).
There is no space in this commentary to dissect out the multitudinous errors built on this fundamental misorientation.
The multitudinous nature of the phenomenological experience can often render these experiences unutterable in verbal form.
The postmodern perspective of contemporary society acknowledges change as important and recognises multitudinous social relations.
The forces of the universe are too multitudinous, varied, changeable, and intermixed to allow accurate prediction or explanation of any but the most limited and strictly controlled events.
Of course, cases come before courts with all of their multitudinous facts, hence this type of situation with exactly the same facts will not occur in practice.
Returning to our original question, namely why should women not be the untrammeled recipients of multitudinous health-care offerings, there is one clear answer: because of the degree of harm.
I know that there is a multitudinous list of amendments, but it is possible that there is a typographical error.