I came across a sentence that uses 'e pluribus' as an adjective. I can't give the exact sentence, but it's something like 'They have many e pluribus quizzes'. Is this commonplace, and what is its meaning? Thank you!
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1Doesn’t seem like a proper usage to me. – Jim Jan 09 '20 at 18:33
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Unless the quizzes have an 'e pluribus' theme in common. Which I doubt. – Joachim Jan 09 '20 at 20:41
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Can you find samples using e pluribus as an adjective anywhere else? Right now it sounds like an error - I don't know what "They have many out of many quizzes" would mean. – TaliesinMerlin Jan 09 '20 at 20:53