nexus

nexo
definition
noun
the nexus between industry and political power
a connection or series of connections linking two or more things.
translation of 'nexus'
noun
nexo
example
And here, one of the things that we really focus on is sort of the 'nexus' of the past and the present, and how the past has come back basically to destroy the present because of what happened then.
As a result, the 'nexus' of America's dairy industry is shifting to such places as New Mexico and Idaho with cheap land and fewer people to complain about the smells wafting from a 5,000-cow dairy farm.
This 'nexus' of ideas continued to be her major focus, emerging again in her first book-length text on metaphysics, The Definition of the Godhead.
These designs are in my view extremely consistent in seeking and developing a particular 'nexus' of ideas.
the 'nexus' between industry and political power
With a coffee shop, conference room and shared secretarial services the centre promises to be a 'nexus' of activity which will in turn energise the commercial life of the city.
Along with examining the major political issues of the day, his new column will focus on the increasingly controversial 'nexus' between business and politics.
a 'nexus' of ideas
London would be the nerve centre of the new Empire, a 'nexus' .
the 'nexus' of all this activity was the disco
By the mid- 1990s it was recognized by all parties concerned that no tight strategic 'nexus' would exist between Russia and the Central Asian republics.
It had rivulets of pattern and color emerging from a central 'nexus' .
That period of artistic production is well known for its connection to a 'nexus' of ideas about national identity, inherent African creativity, and state patronage of the arts.
As much as any American at the time, or arguably since, Elwood Mead understood the critical land-water 'nexus' and its centrality to the success of Zionist endeavors in Palestine.
The question is: should France be promoting its own artists, as Quemin wished, or should Paris be an international 'nexus' , as the Fondation Cartier and the Centre Pompidou practise?
This 'nexus' of problems has suddenly come into focus for me.
The new economy, in short rests strongly on the old, with many start-up firms acting as suppliers or niche competitors in a 'nexus' around the older, larger, central firms.
the 'nexus' of any government in this country is No. 10
the 'nexus' between industry and political power
a 'nexus' of ideas
This paper explores the 'nexus' between industrial restructuring, social capital, and occupational identity through an analysis of the changing structure of the oilpatch trucking industry.
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