The Collaborative International Dictionary
Multifold \Mul"ti*fold\ (m[u^]l"t[i^]*f[=o]ld), a. [Multi- + fold.] Many times doubled; manifold; numerous.
Wiktionary
a. Many; very diverse; manifold.
Usage examples of "multifold".
It is hard to imagine a young woman leading a more complete and multifold existence.
Originals know codes that the Multifold can use to unlock its own powers.
They spoke, too, of the Multifold, but that equally tenuous entity was said to be strung like a veil among the crush of stars and radiant clouds.
I made no attempt to explain to him the economics of galactic commerce, planetary prestige, or the multifold levels of intercommunication.
Not once, but multifold, like the vibration of a reed or violin string.
She also hears of the Multifold, which was created in ages past to contain the Malign.
Jason sprang over the corpse and tore at the multifold bolts and locks that sealed the door.
Only when they had come closer was it clear that the smoke was from the multifold chimneys, both large and small, that studded the buildings, and that the city began at the shore and covered a number of islands in what must be a shallow lagoon.
Though not an exceptionally tall woman, to Maia she seemed to rise above her like a tree, multifold, instinct with a quality of pliant, tense motion.
At a guess, I would have said that the fourth dimension would be something more colorous and complex and varied-a land of multifold hues and many-angled forms.
The black marketeer had bargained everything on a number of aggressive therapies, sacrificing any chance of long-term physical salvation, even of the macabre type that sustained Jongleur, to keep his multifold cancers out of his brain stem until he could undergo the Grail process.