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Menagerie vs Plethora - What's the difference?

menagerie | plethora |

As nouns the difference between menagerie and plethora

is that menagerie is menagerie (a collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept) while plethora is (usually|followed by of) an excessive amount or number; an abundance.

menagerie

Noun

(en noun)
  • A collection of live wild animals on exhibition; the enclosure where they are kept.
  • * 1949 - Bruce Kiskaddon, George R. Stewart
  • In Sacramento a crazed woman opened the cages of a circus menagerie for fear the animals might starve to death, and had been mauled by a lioness.
  • A diverse or miscellaneous group.
  • plethora

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (usually, followed by of) An excessive amount or number; an abundance.
  • The menu offers a plethora of cuisines from around the world.
  • * Jeffrey
  • He labours under a plethora of wit and imagination.
  • (medicine, archaic) An excess of red blood cells or bodily humours.
  • Quotations

    * 1849 , *: I pushed my seat right up before the most insolent gazer, a short fat man, with a plethora of cravat round his neck, and fixing my gaze on his, gave him more gazes than he sent. * 1927 , (The Aftermath of Gothic Fiction) *: Meanwhile other hands had not been idle, so that above the dreary plethora of trash like Marquis von Grosse's Horrid Mysteries ..., there arose many memorable weird works both in English and German.

    Synonyms

    * glut, myriad, surfeit, superfluity, slew

    See also

    * myriad

    References

    * “ plethora]” listed in the [2nd Ed.; 1989
    Pronounced: .

    Anagrams

    * ----