agglomerate

ઢગલો
definition
verb
companies agglomerate multiple sites such as chains of stores
collect or form into a mass or group.
noun
a multimedia agglomerate
a mass or collection of things.
adjective
A short agglomerate cork suggests that the bottler had little regard for the ageing ability of this wine, while a particularly long cork is indicative at least of ambition or optimism.
collected or formed into a mass.
translation of 'agglomerate'
સમૂહ,
સંચય,
ઢગલો,
જથ્થામાં એકઠું કરવું કે થવું,
ગોળો કરી નાખવો કે થઈ જવો,
જથ્થો
example
If firms 'agglomerate' in one or a few regions, they do so impelled by pecuniary externalities that arise from the interaction of increasing returns with transportation costs between regions.
A short 'agglomerate' cork suggests that the bottler had little regard for the ageing ability of this wine, while a particularly long cork is indicative at least of ambition or optimism.
The 'agglomerate' formulation of MF successfully deagglomerates into particles of respirable size during patient inhalation.
For this particular child, I would ask if there are cats in the house cats loose a lot of hair, which tends to 'agglomerate' under beds and in room corners.
On the life insurance side, the risk of urban 'agglomerate' was underestimated, and the risk continues.
However this light coating was not deposited where the dust or 'agglomerate' should have been deposited as a result of cyclonic action, that is at the bottom of the collecting pan.
This invention provides an abrasive article comprising abrasive 'agglomerate' particles and a bond system.
The cheapest form of cork, developed in 1891 by an American businessman, John Smith, is cork 'agglomerate' , occasionally called ‘agglo’, reassembled crumbs of cork which can offer some of the benefits of intact cork itself.
Rocky material formed by the accumulation of large ejecta is classified as 'agglomerate' .
If carbides are allowed to 'agglomerate' or form grain-boundary films during heat treatment or in service at elevated temperatures, they can seriously impair ductility and cause embrittlement.
This uptake of oxygen, however slow or fast, tends to reduce fresh, grapey primary aromas and also causes small tannin molecules to 'agglomerate' , which changes colour towards gold in whites and softens astringency in both reds and whites.
Herbert aims to 'agglomerate' intellectual movements in various disciplines and show the deep connections that make them part of a single episteme.
Fluxes are therefore used to protect the melt from oxidation, to 'agglomerate' nonmetallic inclusions originating with the charge, and to break up and collect the oxide inclusions and skins that may form during melting.
These form all kinds of 'agglomerates' and aggregates, including fibrils, in a precise morphological hierarchy.
It has 'agglomerated' population, centralized means of production, and has concentrated property in a few hands.
London is not one homogenised urban sprawl: it is hundreds of once separate villages that the Victorian explosion 'agglomerated' into a continuous habitation.
Links to these databases are available from each ‘GeneCard ’… a webpage 'agglomerating' information about a specific gene and its products.
The Chilwa province is composed of several granite, syenite, and nepheline-syenite plutons that are associated with extrusive carbonatites and 'agglomerates' .
Instead they consolidated into larger population 'agglomerates' .
Nominal wages increase in the more 'agglomerated' region because, as a result of the additional firm's entry, there is greater aggregate production and thus greater demand for labor.
Under Jiang Zemin, the leadership announced it would follow the chaebol and kereitsu models of Korea and Japan where protected industries 'agglomerated' into massive enterprises.
The region had excellent potential for further 'agglomerated' growth.
The volcanic strata consist of sheet-like flows of andesite, dacite, basalts, and trachybasalts that are interbedded with 'agglomerates' and tuffs.
The Sun 'agglomerated' from a huge cloud of gas and dust, which was largely the debris left from previous expired stars and supernova explosions.
In addition, long chains of similarly sized particles are frequently formed, and they may collapse into spherical- or raft-shaped 'agglomerates' in the high humidity of the respiratory tract.
From the outset, a dilapidated building - dark, dingy and dangerous - mirrors the standard of care for the 'agglomerated' , forgotten Brazilian criminal underclass.
As a general rule, in the process of 'agglomerating' the subgroups, once two items are associated to a subgroup, they remain in the same subgroup as the number of subgroups grows larger.
At the top of the list are sectors that are relatively 'agglomerated' ; at the bottom are industries that are much more dispersed.
They are the necessary ‘housekeeping’ genes, which regulate and make possible the transactions between our separate cells, and keep us functioning as organisms, rather than cancerous 'agglomerations' .
The two patent claims refer to the action of the cyclone as providing ‘means for progressively 'agglomerating' particles in the whirling stream leaving the tuyere’.
Credits: Google Translate