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Many

Many is an English determiner and pronoun used to indicate a large number of countable items. It typically accompanies plural nouns (many books, many ideas). It is not normally used with noncount nouns such as water or sand; for those, many is replaced by much, a lot of, or lots of. In formal style, many often occurs in statements and questions about quantity.

Grammatical notes: With interrogatives, you say How many? Example: How many apples are there? In negatives or

Origin and usage history: Many derives from Old English manig, related to other Germanic languages; it has

Other uses: Many also appears as a proper noun in place names, such as the town of

See also: quantifier, count noun.

with
small
quantities,
you
can
say
There
aren’t
many
options.
In
affirmative
clauses:
There
are
many
reasons
to
stay.
The
phrase
as
many
as
is
used
to
emphasize
a
larger-than-expected
quantity
(as
many
as
twenty
people).
A
less
formal
substitute
is
lots
of
or
a
lot
of,
especially
in
spoken
English.
In
some
older
or
literary
contexts,
many
a
is
used
before
a
singular
noun
(many
a
night
she
dreamed).
cognates
in
Dutch
veel,
German
viele,
and
other
languages.
Over
time
it
developed
into
the
modern
determiner
and
pronoun
used
for
count
nouns.
Many
in
Vernon
Parish,
Louisiana,
United
States.
It
is
also
used
as
a
surname
or
given
name
in
some
cases.