(Plethora means an abundant excess as a bountiful excesss such as riches.)
"The Thanksgiving feast was a plethora of favorite foods of the family."
"There was a plethora of costumes to choose from for the masquerade."
"From the plethora of possible names for the project, he chose the most apt."
The plethora of escapes from supposedly secure prisons embarrassed the hapless wardens. The success of his videos inspired a plethora of imitators.
There was a plethora of food on the table at Thanksgiving.
Plethora is singular and the plural form is plethoras
superabundance, an excess
"Plethora" is a singular noun, so you say "is a plethora."
"There was a plethora of items in her desk." "Plethora" is not a verb / action word, so it will not change forms from a present to a past tense.
I count this question as a joke.The Australian government initiative for health and wellbeing has been Medicare for a plethora of years.www.discoverlr.com
This is my favorite buffet because it offers a plethora of international cuisine.
No. The word plethora is a noun requiring an article: a plethora. But more important, it means too much, too many, excessive, dangerously plentiful. It is NOT a synonym for "many."
idiosyncrasy, plethora
The multipurpose room could be used for meetings, storage, and a plethora of other things.
What the author really wanted to say was inevident among the narrator's rambling diatribes and the plethora of minor characters and subplots.Whatever depression and mental torment she was going through was completely inevident to her friends and family.