multifaceted

[ US /ˌməɫtiˈfæsətɪd/ ]
[ UK /mˌʌltɪfˈæsɛtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. having many aspects or qualities
    the multifarious noise of a great city
    a multifaceted undertaking
    multifarious interests
    a many-sided subject
    a miscellaneous crowd
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How To Use multifaceted In A Sentence

  • Experts now recognize that depression is a multifaceted disorder with dysregulation in a number of different systems.
  • The company produced a multifaceted bifold office brochure, with CD, office tear sheets, flyers, and special project brochures.
  • The gun culture is a multilayered, multifaceted phenomenon made up of diverse, complex subcultures.
  • According to his definition, it is a multifaceted concept - an expanding phenomenon in a certain period of history.
  • Nature was a great pedagogue, and any social engineering, any mechanical scheme of education, could not replace the accidented and multifaceted influences that, he claimed, made him a poet. An Interview with Harold Bloom
  • Even worse is the thought that ISPs should be policing content, or that we should be brainwashing children to chant the multifaceted marvellousness of intellectual monopolies. Get Creative with Creative Content Online
  • And it's good to show such a multifaceted scene, because we all could actually be subdivided into different types of punk.
  • He realised that a writer had to widen his mind when he encountered cartoonist Madan's multifaceted knowledge of subjects from anthropology to psychology.
  • Critical reflection is a multifaceted construct requiring a multifaceted approach.
  • Fleas show a transformation of the multifaceted eyes and ommatidia of most insects, replaced instead with heavily sclerotized, atypical ocelli, or ‘eyespots,’ or in some cases, a complete absence of any eye at all.
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