| adjective | 1. Comprising or relating to all sorts or varieties. |
|
|
|
 |  | | "The omnifarious political panel was primed to spark debates." |
|  | | "The vendor at the farmers market had an omnifarious tomato display." |
|  | | "Everyone in our party was satisfied by the omnifarious diner menu." |
|
|
|
Ads help keep Word Daily free. |
 | Latin, mid-17th century |
|
|
 | "Omnifarious" is another way of saying "diverse." It comes from the late Latin "omnifarius," meaning "of all sorts." There's another 17th-century English word — "omniferous" — with a very similar definition, yet a different Latin root... | Continue Reading |
|
|  | Do you remember these words? | |
Thank you for supporting our advertisers. |
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment