Not many

  • 1Not Many — Single by Scribe from the album The Crusader A side Stand Up …

    Wikipedia

  • 2not many! — exclamation British an all purpose term of dismissal, deri sion, etc., in London working class speech. Its precise derivation is unclear, but it may be a replacement for the earlier use of not much! as an ironic riposte to a statement of the obvi …

    Contemporary slang

  • 3not many Benny — • a seldom heard phrase now. Used to indicate agreement. If anyone has any idea of the origins of this one I would be interested …

    Londonisms dictionary

  • 4Many — Ma ny, a. & pron. Note: [It has no variation to express degrees of comparison; more and most, which are used for the comparative and superlative degrees, are from a different root.] [OE. mani, moni, AS. manig, m[ae]nig, monig; akin to D. menig,… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 5Many a — Many Ma ny, a. & pron. Note: [It has no variation to express degrees of comparison; more and most, which are used for the comparative and superlative degrees, are from a different root.] [OE. mani, moni, AS. manig, m[ae]nig, monig; akin to D.… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 6Many one — Many Ma ny, a. & pron. Note: [It has no variation to express degrees of comparison; more and most, which are used for the comparative and superlative degrees, are from a different root.] [OE. mani, moni, AS. manig, m[ae]nig, monig; akin to D.… …

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • 7not — W1S1 [nɔt US na:t] adv [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: nought] 1.) used to make a word, statement, or question negative ▪ Most of the stores do not open until 10am. ▪ She s not a very nice person. ▪ You were wrong not to inform the police. ▪ Can we go… …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 8not much — not a lot, not many; not especially, not in particular …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 9many — man|y W1S1 [ˈmeni] determiner, pron, adj [: Old English; Origin: manig] 1.) a large number of people or things ≠ ↑few →↑more, most ↑most, much ↑much ▪ Many people have to use a car to travel to work. ▪ I don t have many friends. ▪ …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 10many — [[t]me̱ni[/t]] ♦ 1) DET: DET pl n, oft with brd neg You use many to indicate that you are talking about a large number of people or things. I don t think many people would argue with that... Not many films are made in Finland... Do you keep many… …

    English dictionary