Why this word is great
MULTEITY — [Noun] The quality of being many or manifold; multiplicity. From Latin multus ("much, many") + the suffix -eity (denoting a quality or state). Unlike "multiplicity" (which broadly denotes a large number or variety) or "plurality" (which implies a simple state of being more than one), "multeity" evokes the inherent richness of manifoldness within a unity. It is the dappled light of a forest floor, where countless sunbeams weave through leaves yet form a single shimmering tapestry; it is the murmuration of starlings, a thousand individual birds dissolving into one fluid pulse; it is the way a single human face can hold, without contradiction, the traces of every ancestor who came before. The world insists on its multeity—on being both one and many at once.