The AI-powered English dictionary
countable and uncountable, plural magnitudes
(uncountable, countable) The absolute or relative size, extent or importance of something. quotations examples
And on a programme of works of this magnitude, passengers will need to be mindful of the age-old maxim of 'no gain without pain'.
2020 September 23, Paul Stephen, “East Coast upgrade: changes to schedule... but on schedule”, in Rail, page 31
(countable) An order of magnitude. examples
(mathematics) A number, assigned to something, such that it may be compared to others numerically examples
(mathematics) Of a vector, the norm, most commonly, the two-norm. examples
(astronomy) A logarithmic scale of brightness defined so that a difference of 5 magnitudes is a factor of 100.
(uncountable) The apparent brightness of a star, with lower magnitudes being brighter; apparent magnitude examples
(countable) A ratio of intensity expressed as a logarithm. quotations examples
Observations in the infrared domain allow one to penetrate the ~25-30 magnitudes of extinction present at visible wavelengths.
2005, Andreas Eckart et al., The Black Hole at the Center of the Milky Way, page 71
(seismology) A measure of the energy released by an earthquake (e.g. on the Richter scale).