Abraham
Of the crowd, flock, multitude; of the army, procession.
A:Abram means 'Exalted Father'. Abraham means 'Father of Many'. Undoubtedly the tradents who passed on these stories orally until they were finally written down later in the first millennium BCE needed prompts to help them to remember which names to associate with which storyline, so we have names such as these, or others such as Jacob: "Takes by the heel."
Multitude is a normal English word. It has been used in your Bible translation because the word 'multitude' is the closest English word that matches the word used in the original text. What does it mean in the Bible? The same as anywhere else.If you genuinely don't know what the word means, that's also fine. 'A multitude' is 'a great number'. For example: "There is a multitude of words in the dictionary." Is the same as: "There is a great number of words in the dictionary."(Just as a bonus, a grammatical point. 'Multitude is a singular word, even though it refers to more than one thing, which is why 'there is a multitude', and the same rule applies with 'there is a great number'. Multitude is a good word to use, so I thought I'd just let you know.)
That is Abraham of the Jewish Talmud and the Old Testament of the standard Christian Bible.
There is a multitude of answers to that question. There's a multitude of buttons in the tin.
Yes, a crowd is a multitude.
There is a multitude of people at the party
In Your Multitude was created in 1995-04.
PT can mean a multitude of things, Though All I could think of is Physical Training.
There was a multitude of people at the concert.
It means to discuss both points of view concerning the issue, and from a multitude of perspectives.