Dictionary
conglomerations
noun
Plural of conglomeration
synonyms
Exact(37)
About the time of the birth of Christ, tribal groups gradually organized themselves, after some years of settled life as rice cultivators, into city-kingdoms, or conglomerations of villages.
In Crohn disease the maximum damage to the intestine occurs beneath the mucosa, and lymphoid conglomerations, known as granulomata, are formed in the submucosa.
The growing conglomerations of media companies, as well as the proliferation of cable channels, led to a dramatic increase not only in the amount of information available but also in competition for audiences.
In America, a woman called Esther Howland started selling mass-produced Valentines – twee conglomerations of hearts, flowers, lace, ribbon, bunny rabbits and glutinous protestations about the sweetness of kisses.
Individual tubercles are microscopic in size, but most of the visible manifestations of tuberculosis, from barely visible nodules to large tuberculous masses, are conglomerations of tubercles.
Avogadro called such conglomerations molecules, and, on the basis of experimental work, he conjectured that the molecules in a gas of hydrogen or oxygen are formed from pairs of atoms.
Similar(20)
Focus, argue the men from BCG, can be a straitjacket.Harder than it looksTo say that a well-run conglomerate can sometimes succeed is hardly proof that conglomeration is a sound principle.
There's no conglomeration of wealthy business owners to complain that privacy will drive up their costs.
Brexit might be the ugliest word in the entire history of language – managing to simultaneously sound like the name of a minor multinational adhesives conglomeration and the noise you make when you barf three litres of semi-digested Weetabix into a metal colander – but that hasn't stopped the prospect of an EU referendum from dominating the news cycle.
It had requested a hearing to dispute the decision by the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), a conglomeration of America's main financial regulators, to declare it a "systemically important financial institution" (SIFI).
THE Germans have a word for it indeed, suitably enough, a conglomeration of words: Torschlusspanik, a panicky fear of closing gates.
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