ADJECTIVE
- having many parts or sides
-
full of variety or interest
a many-sided personality -
having many aspects or qualities
the multifarious noise of a great city
a multifaceted undertaking
multifarious interests
a many-sided subject
a miscellaneous crowd
How To Use many-sided In A Sentence
- Thanks to this many-sided usage, together with its religious colouring (“the church called by God”) and the possibilities of personification which it offered, the conception and the term alike rapidly came to the front. The Mission and Expansion of Christianity in the First Three Centuries
- I imagine that the thought of suicide was something Kim had held up to the light like a many-sided crystal, thought about, toyed with in moments for years. History of a Suicide
- She was so many-sided, so many-mooded — “protean-mooded” I called her. Chapter 28
- May it not be possible to obtain, by such collaborative effort, more fundamental evidence on pathogenesis in such presently obscure and yet devastating conditions as pulmonary fibrosis in its many forms, the emphysematous change, bulla formation, the many-sided problem of pulmonary vascular change, the disorders of the bronchial circulation? Dickinson W. Richards - Nobel Lecture
- The many-sided interests - art, history, technical and military - have resulted in a wide and diverse audience that is sure to be satisfied with the variety and quality of this exhibition.
- As I have indicated above, the reasons for poor collaboration between services are complex and many-sided.
- Their contributions to the life and structures of the empire were both many and many-sided.
- The influence of the colonial revolution on the awakening masses of the workers' states has been complex and many-sided.
- The EU has been built on a view of itself as an expanding universe of rational actions and many-sided decision-making, with a slow but inexorable momentum towards ever closer union.
- A many-sided character, he wrote poetry and was a keen cricketer and cook.