English to Hindi Dictionary agglomerate

agglomerate

ढेरी
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'
पुंजीकृत,
ढेरी,
पिंडीकृत,
पिंड,
पुंज
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.
This invention provides an abrasive article comprising abrasive 'agglomerate' particles and a bond system.
Herbert aims to 'agglomerate' intellectual movements in various disciplines and show the deep connections that make them part of a single episteme.
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.
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.
Rocky material formed by the accumulation of large ejecta is classified as 'agglomerate' .
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.
The 'agglomerate' formulation of MF successfully deagglomerates into particles of respirable size during patient inhalation.
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.
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.
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.
On the life insurance side, the risk of urban 'agglomerate' was underestimated, and the risk continues.
An unique aspect of the 'agglomerates' according to the present invention is that they are formed without the use of a separate bonding substance, such as an adhesive.
This means that organisms are not 'agglomerates' but ecosystems of co-acting cells with a unique functional focus.
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.
The most significant feature was the importance of the female line, which constituted the connecting threads that held together different family 'agglomerates' .
Quartz stretching lineations in the shear zones are down-dip and rotated clasts in the 'agglomerates' suggest top-to-the-NE shearing or thrusting of the volcanic series over the Delb Khairkhan melange.
For example, the Lower Carboniferous green volcanic ashes and 'agglomerates' from Oxroad Bay in East Lothian, Scotland contain abundant anatomically preserved plants that were overlooked by those studying the geology.
While the industry as a whole was being 'agglomerated' by media moguls, Ted Perry was a blunt-headed cottage craftsman who lived above the shop and knew the value and function of every inventoried item.
The last name on the list has an 'agglomerated' population of only 15,208.
London is not one homogenised urban sprawl: it is hundreds of once separate villages that the Victorian explosion 'agglomerated' into a continuous habitation.
A democracy erected on the foundations of social choice theory will see the role of politics as a stage on which different 'agglomerations' of self-interest bargain and reach workable compromises.
In this process the human proteins are inactivated and 'agglomerates' are formed which may be the cause of the observed intolerance to the injection solutions.
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' .
As these centres became politically 'agglomerated' in the 16th century, variations on what soon became virtually an artistic canon became more solely individual than regional.
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.
The Chilwa province is composed of several granite, syenite, and nepheline-syenite plutons that are associated with extrusive carbonatites and 'agglomerates' .
Waste was hauled by truck to various designated dumps, and the ore was to be stockpiled or to be directly crushed, screened, and 'agglomerated' .
The 'agglomerative' , or grouping, schedule provided by Ward's method indicated a notable flattening of the curve of squared Euclidean distances after the five-cluster solution.
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