This tag has been burninated. Please do not recreate it. If you need advice on which tag to use, see the answer below. If you see this tag reappearing, it may need to be blacklisted.
I recently came across the multiple tag, which I'd like to see burn. The main reason is that it's not a programming concept, thus not on-topic for the site.
The tag has 194 questions, 54 followers (somehow), no wiki or excerpt, and there's virtually no commonality between questions on this tag.
Burnination criteria:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
I'd say no, it often doesn't describe the questions at all.
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No here also, the concept of single vs multiple is pretty much a core concept that can be applied to anything, but I wouldn't consider it on-topic
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
Nope, you often can't deduce anything about the information in the question by seeing this tag.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
I'd say yes here, but that doesn't make it a good tag.
In response to what the benefit from burninating this tag is:
I think the main benefit is that existence of such a tag encourages wrongly using tags, making posts harder to find. Tags should reflect the categories in which the question falls, and not be a description of the question.
Take for example this question tagged excel-vba rows value multiple split-apply-combine. Due to the many tags that are more descriptive, it's maxed at 5 tags and missing the excel tag, thus missing followers on that tag.
Of course, there are many more examples, (non-Excel too). These were two both posted this week.
This one doesn't have either excel or excel-vba, thus Excel users won't find the question. It's maxed at 5 tags, and imo only the first one helps the question get found.
I think since the tag adds so little to the questions, it will be relatively low effort to burn this tag. We can just do a cleanup, and then remove the tag from the remaining questions, without having to worry about finding alternative tags.