Panoply
The word "panoply" is pronounced as "PAN-uh-plee."
This is not an English word. Perhaps you mean panoply, which means an impressive collection of things. He has an inventive panoply of insults.
Panoply means an impressive display or complete collection of something. She had a panoply of blooms in her backyard garden.
A panoply is a complete suit of armour. The word represents the ancient Greek πανοπλια. The word παν means "all", and όπλον, "arms". Thus "panoply"refers to the full armour of a hoplite or heavy-armed soldier, i.e. the shield, breastplate, helmet and greaves, together with the sword and lance.As applied to armour of a later date, panoply did not come into use till the end of the 16th and beginning of the 17th century, and was then used of the complete suits of plate-armour covering the whole body.Because a panoply is a complete set of diverse components, the word panoply has come to refer to any complete or impressive collection. As heavy armour is rarely worn in the present age, this latter meaning is the more common in modern usage.a complete or impressive collection of things/ a splendid disply
Ready to send the crux of the climb the leader left the belay with a panoply of gear.
Panoply
pretty Peony pony party petty panoply perfidy palsy penny penury penalty panty portly
Collection is a synonym; Single is an antonym
The dazzling panoply of juices, fluids, and moistures that comprise it.
No! Perusal is not in a word family.
The Luhya word for the English word family is "familia."