agglomerations love

Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of agglomeration.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • The Gault-Millaut Benelux guide, which covers one of the world's denser agglomerations of fine restaurants, named Mr. Hardiquest its 2011 chef of the year.

    A chef's Bon-Bon voyage J. S. Marcus 2011

  • In fact, all cultures are agglomerations of things that were picked up along the way in different places.

    Matthew Yglesias » A Back and Forth on Israel 2009

  • That is because the stoppers for bubbly are not punched corks but agglomerations with two sterlized disks of natural cork at the business end of the cork.

    Vent your spleen: synthetic corks! | Dr Vino's wine blog 2009

  • I want to be beside those who live in the metropolitan agglomerations, in the wilds of the forests, inland or on the coast, in the capitals and on the borders of Brazil.

    Dilma Rousseff Inauguration Speech: Brazil's First Female President Addresses Congress In Brasilia (FULL TEXT) Adam J. Rose 2011

  • In The God Delusion, Dawkins argues that you and I (and he) do not exist as real things, but rather as casual agglomerations of matter, which I suppose illustrates Nietzsche's dictum that from the death of God follows quickly the death of Reason.

    May 6th, 2009 m_francis 2009

  • The word "city" will lose some of its meaning: it will make less and less sense to describe agglomerations of tens of millions of people as if they were one place, with one identity.

    20 predictions for the next 25 years 2011

  • There are of course similar transportation planner dreams for California's other urban agglomerations.

    Joel Epstein: California's High-Speed Rail Mistake Joel Epstein 2011

  • They are agglomerations, about a yard tall, of unglamorous materials cement, scrap wood, rebar, wire with a vertical—dare we say phallic?

    The Edge of a New Frontier Peter Plagens 2012

  • He would have us believe that organisms are the same such "casual agglomerations of matter."

    May 6th, 2009 m_francis 2009

  • As a result, existing geographic agglomerations of capital are largely self-reinforcing and here to stay, even if new ones come into being in unexpected places (often through decisions made by national governments).

    Ian Fletcher: The Myth of the Global Economy 2010

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