the.com/many
More than a few, fewer than counted — the word that gives up before the math does.
means A large but unspecified number of things, enough that you stop bothering to tally them.
from From Old English manig, sibling to German manch, rooted in a Proto-Germanic word for plenty that predates anyone needing to be exact.
Sneaky singularTakes plural verbs but a singular noun: many a soul.
Comparative cousinMore and most are its irregular ranked forms.
Math dodgeNo fixed threshold; vibes-based quantity by design.