Agglomeration

Word AGGLOMERATION
Character 13
Hyphenation ag glom er a tion
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Agglomeration"

What do we mean by agglomeration?

The act or process of gathering into a mass. noun

A confused or jumbled mass. noun

The act of agglomerating or the state of being agglomerated; the state of gathering or being gathered into a mass. noun

That which is agglomerated; a collection; a heap; any mass, assemblage, or cluster formed by mere juxtaposition. noun

The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together. noun

State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster. noun

The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together. noun

State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster. noun

An extended city area comprising the built-up area of a central city and any suburbs linked by continuous urban area. noun

A jumbled collection or mass noun

The act of collecting in a mass; the act of agglomerating noun

The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together.

State of being collected in a mass; a mass; cluster.

An extended city area comprising the built-up area of a central city and any suburbs linked by continuous urban area.

A mass of large volcanic fragments bonded under heat.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Agglomeration

  • Antonyms for agglomeration
  • Agglomeration antonyms not found!

The word "agglomeration" in example sentences

In our last blog we used the term agglomeration and one commenter asked: is that really a word, Gallagher? ❋ Unknown (2008)

The result of this agglomeration is a reassessment of eighteenth-century connections between practical techniques, philosophical ideas, and the cultures in which they resided. ❋ Unknown (2006)

[98] Time out of mind it has been the habit of writers, both within the order and without, to treat Masonry as though it were a kind of agglomeration of archaic remains and platitudinous moralizings, made up of the heel-taps of Operative legend and the fag-ends of Occult lore. ❋ Joseph Fort Newton (1913)

History, like nature, illustrates for us the application of the law of inertia and agglomeration which is put lightly in the proverb, "Nothing succeeds like success." ❋ Henri Fr��d��ric Amiel (1885)

Other drying technologies, such as agglomeration, result in granular starch. ❋ Unknown (2009)

This type of beds can usually present problems such as agglomeration of solid particles and points of high temperature. ❋ Unknown (2008)

In finance, “there is a huge network and agglomeration effect,” former assistant U.S. ❋ Unknown (2009)

This agglomeration of old pseudoaristocracies (corporatist heirs to the colonial overlords and Confederate planterocracy), Nietzschean masters and slaves under a facade of Christianity, and miserable hypocrite Ubermenschen termed the GOP simply can not go quietly. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Still, at least my abject failure in this regard chimes with the theme of the new (ish) series to which we now turn – Community (Viva, Tuesdays, 10pm), the tale of an agglomeration of losers and misfits united by their attendance at the US equivalent of a pub drip tray, the community college. ❋ Lucy Mangan (2010)

Taubman is almost the "Anti- Simon"--a focused collection of high-quality malls, rather than a huge agglomeration of some of everything. ❋ Peter Slatin (2011)

English 16th-century builders domesticated influences from Europe and blended them into the eclectic and eccentric agglomeration that we still revere as Tudor. ❋ Unknown (2011)

London and New York, meanwhile, enjoy "inertia" and hundreds of years of agglomeration of talent and resources that is hard to replicate. ❋ Marc Champion (2010)

Krugman is better advised to look at his own research on agglomeration and he will find stimulus activities work by being cyclical activities tending to push the economy toward the restructuring. ❋ Unknown (2009)

In 2008, she says, 3,849 out of 9,000 California schools used ESY, which she regards as part of the "new Food Hysteria" that is promoted by “an agglomeration of foodies and educational reformers who are propelled by a vacuous if well-meaning ideology.” ❋ Olga Bonfiglio (2010)

He is a Catholic who sees society not as an agglomeration of random Randian individualists but as part of a community, part of a whole. ❋ Peggy Noonan (2012)

The other components, which might be considered a vague agglomeration of privacy, property in individual copies, and speech interests in preserving existing books, are not well articulated in the case law and might seem less important once a court has concluded that a particular work is infringing. ❋ Rebecca Tushnet (2009)

The best solution is a reasonable mix, without an over-agglomeration of any one usage. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Surprisingly, the specialty served amid this agglomeration of Old World architecture was Southern fried chicken. ❋ Richard Snow (2011)

Regarding the Long Depression, the agglomeration activity he has discovered in his Nobel work would be the consolidation of major ports for highly efficient shipping based on the international telegraph. ❋ Unknown (2009)

Cross Reference for Agglomeration

  • Agglomeration cross reference not found!

What does agglomeration mean?

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