From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmulticulturalmul‧ti‧cul‧tur‧al /ˌmʌltiˈkʌltʃərəl◂/ ●○○ adjective SSRinvolving or including people or ideas from many different countries, races, or religions → multi-ethnic a multicultural society
Examples from the Corpus
multicultural• The new Western is also more multicultural.• The radio station serves a multicultural community.• A first step is to try to raise our own awareness of the issues involved in multicultural education generally.• I planned my own units, gave homework, implemented multicultural education.• It is crucial that this does not happen with aspects of multicultural mathematics.• I thought: we live in a multicultural society, but everything we see is white and stereotyped.• Encouraging authors to recognise that they live in a complex, multicultural society is one thing.• No other school is more multicultural than Hunter, and the differences are exciting rather than frightening.