maniverse

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From blend of many + universe.

Noun

maniverse (plural maniverses)

  1. The hypothetical set of manifold possible universes parallel to our own; multiverse.
    • 1909, Bolton Hall, Life, and love and peace:
      What is meant by this is that this is a universe and not a diverse or a maniverse and that what appears to be separate and contradictory is so only in appearance and not in reality. One Purpose underlies and interpenetrates all existence.
    • 2003, Phillip Hoffmann, Nothing So Absurd: An Invitation to Philosophy:
      Musings. [The world] is neither a universe pure and simple nor a manyverse pure and simple.
    • 2011, The Kob, Amazon.co.uk: Customer Reviews:
      Then there is the title `multiverse'. In actual fact, this book is about the Anthropic principal and new theories of the big bang(s) and whole manyverse beyond our Observable Universe that might exist.
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