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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a homogeneous world" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a world that is uniform or similar in characteristics, often in discussions about culture, society, or environment.
Example: "In a homogeneous world, diversity may be lost, leading to a lack of innovation and creativity."
Alternatives: "a uniform world" or "a similar world".
Exact(4)
The forces that Levitt described didn't produce a homogeneous world market; they produced a global culture.
It is no longer a homogeneous world of nuclear families, dormitory towns and middle-class whites.
Instead we are busily creating a homogeneous world, the diversity of plants and animals replaced by 22 billion chickens, 1.5 billion cattle, 1.2 billion sheep and a billion each for goats and pigs, a mix of species determined by the 7.5 billion Homo sapiens on the planet.
Thus, in a homogeneous world of suitable substrate, fruit flies would spend 98.8% of their time on the substrates and only 1.2% flying.
Similar(56)
Florida's Norton Museum of Art called it "a strangely homogeneous world where night never came, knees never got scraped, parents never yelled and everything was fun".
At a time when specialty stores like Dean & DeLuca and Balducci's are increasingly faceless since the founders have sold out, these mom-and-pop stores still provide the authentic personality that always has appeal in an increasingly homogeneous world.
I grew up in Kansas City in a homogeneous little world.
A well-liked "SNL" veteran, he was comfortable telling timely jokes from behind a desk, but he was also the umpteenth white, male host in the deeply homogeneous world of late night.
Although The Social Network didn't invent the GOOD THING GOOD THING BAD THING tag line format – examples can be seen in the promotional materials for Abel Ferrera's original Bad Lieutenant ("GAMBLER THIEF JUNKIE KILLER COP") or 24 Hour Party People ("GENIUS POET TWAT") – Kellerhouse's striking design rippled throughout the increasingly homogeneous world of movie posters.
It is thus reasonable to hypothesize that differences in the evolutionary history of loci associated to disease could have led to a non-homogeneous world-wide distribution of genetic risk variants.
In this way, the financial inclusion narrative assumes that the poor around the world are a homogeneous population that suffers from a universal condition of 'financial exclusion'.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com