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"conglomeration" Definitions
  1. [countable, usually singular] a conglomeration (of something) (formal) a mixture of different things that are found all together
  2. [uncountable] the process of forming a conglomerate; the state of being a conglomerate

122 Sentences With "conglomeration"

How to use conglomeration in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "conglomeration" and check conjugation/comparative form for "conglomeration". Mastering all the usages of "conglomeration" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Like many media companies, Verizon's bizarrely named conglomeration of Yahoo!
Our brains themselves are a conglomeration of animal instinct and higher discernment.
Six months ago, Lyft raised $600 million from a conglomeration of investors.
The result: A conglomeration of creatures that turn the human form freakishly alien.
I imagine myself as a conglomeration of identities, a — pardon me — melting pot.
People are just less excited about owning a giant conglomeration of YouTube networks.
The embalming fluid that we use is a conglomeration of a bunch of different things.
The unlikely conglomeration of objects lies in the center of an enormous and dark exhibition room.
Can a conglomeration of bricks, glass, wood, steel and mortar reveal the soul of a city?
It's actually a conglomeration of the multiple characters that starred in Nintendo's early Game & Watch games.
But, that being said, you can hear this strange conglomeration of different things in the track.
Ms. Bassett, standing beside the work, explained that the composition offered a conglomeration of Romantic values.
For precisely these reasons, the updated Glass-Steagall proposals pushed by Sanders, Warren, McCain and others is a 21st-century Glass-Steagall, designed to end or to regulate today's shadow banking and conglomeration just as the original Glass-Steagall ended the last century's shadow banking and conglomeration.
Scientists believe that it is a conglomeration of leftovers, largely unchanged over the last 2500 billion years.
Here in Canada, a relatively recent conglomeration of former British colonies, we've also grappled with separatist urges.
Toronto's annual tech conglomeration, Collision, will be online-only, as will computing tech firm Nvidia's GTC conference.
Yeah, so he's got this big conglomeration of internet properties, one of which became ... He bought About.com.
The new product might contain characteristics substantially equivalent to a conglomeration of predicates but not a single product.
Each of Biggers's constructions was a conglomeration of familiar textiles, a dense medley of layered significations about domesticity.
One of the artists' challenges is how to communicate to children that their work is more than conglomeration.
I worked at Frito-Lay International, which was a conglomeration of all these snack companies around the world.
I have issues with frivolous spending, so I'm trying to look into [investing in a] conglomeration of stocks.
Just like every company, it is a conglomeration of people, who are probably just trying to do their best.
Firms win tax breaks and other enticements; employees' use of infrastructure puts a further burden on the whole conglomeration.
SXSW – short for 'South by Southwest' – is an annual conglomeration of film, interactive media, and music festivals and conferences.
It would require people to become individuals again instead of just a conglomeration of ideas heard from the internet.
The country's largest private employers include Walmart, McDonald's, Kroger and the conglomeration of KFC, Pizza Hut and Taco Bell.
As I mentioned before, the embalming fluid is a conglomeration of different things, and one of them is a coloring agent.
His works are a conglomeration of effects, something that has been present to varying degrees since the beginning of his career.
Aaman said he was thankful for the elevated stage that Wednesday's conglomeration afforded programs eager for a day in the spotlight.
There is no monolithic mainstream here but rather a conglomeration of Others, a dynamic, free-for-all, often loopy national motorcade.
A younger generation caught conglomeration fever and binged on acquisitions, adding Baskin-Robbins, an American ice-cream chain, and continental meat-processors.
It's a conglomeration of internet properties, many of which you've heard of, some of which you haven't, controlled by Barry Diller. Correct.
His description — that the flames were a conglomeration of mute, spiky mouths that were almost liquid-like in substance — seemed cryptic and otherworldly.
If there were ever sentient beings in the Ophiuchus cluster, a faraway conglomeration of galaxies in the southern sky, they are long gone.
It is an interesting conglomeration of people who are looking for some kind of humanitarian outreach, but aren't willing to work with churches.
"There is nothing special about this street, it's a conglomeration of architectural styles, and the trees just tie it all together," she said.
Mr. Franken took aim at proposed telecommunications mergers during his time in Congress, relishing his role as a congressional opponent to media conglomeration.
Harder, in some ways, because there is not an electorate that has a say but a conglomeration of powerful forces, particularly well-heeled boosters.
Look no further than U.S. tax policy, which is not a policy at all, but a grotesque conglomeration of special-interest favors and loopholes.
As countless anime TV shows have taught us, sometimes the most powerful flying robot is in fact a conglomeration of several smaller flying robots.
From a distance, the migration looks like a giant red carpet, and only a close-up view shows the conglomeration for what it is.
The conglomeration of forms Kautz has arranged in the T-shaped gallery alludes to the commodity fetishism that rots religion, politics, industry, and art.
The Bolsheviks' nationality policy, as articulated by Stalin in the early 21970s, envisioned the Soviet Union as a conglomeration of ethnic and cultural entities.
The clock is run by the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, a conglomeration of experts on nuclear policy, climate change, and other global threats.
The problem is that 5G connectivity will rely not just on one single-band network, but a conglomeration of multiple different types of networks.
"Little Man #220" (1967) is a screaming conglomeration of passages of energetically applied paint, his head dissolving into lighter tones and the neutral background.
Switch feels more like a smart conglomeration of ideas we've seen before than it does something totally new, but that's a point in its favor.
Just any human being is this wonderful conglomeration of experiences and behaviors, if you like — some of them healthy, some of them not so healthy.
The body paint she uses is a visual conglomeration of the patterns used by various ethnic groups throughout Ethiopia, the country where she was born.
Contract labor is prevalent in nearly all parts of the new mobility industry — a loose conglomeration of ride-hailing companies and scooter- and bike-rental operators.
This summer's top comedy conglomeration of badass bitches is sure to be Rough Night, starring Scarlett Johansson, Kate McKinnon, Ilana Glazer, Zoe Kravitz, and Jillian Bell.
The left-wing Balad party is part of the Joint Arab List, a conglomeration of four factions that holds 13 seats in the 120-member Knesset.
A conglomeration of several anonymous sources forms a figure known as The Informant, an official-looking blond woman created with volumetric point cloud footage (see above).
"I think patients will appreciate that the physician is thinking about them as a whole person and not just a conglomeration of risk factors," he says.
Al Hol, a sprawling, isolated conglomeration of tents on rocky soil surrounded by a chain-link fence and armed guards, held about 9,000 people in December.
We thought up the alien race—a conglomeration of different races—and talked about what they might be, quickly putting those ideas into a basic level progression.
Previously, it seemed to Cramer that Etsy only issued a confusing conglomeration of information about the next year that had long descriptions and not many actual numbers.
Usually it's fairly clear to me if something needs to be a standalone video, audio, or text, or whether—which is most often the case—a conglomeration.
In these moments, I don't think of Gravel as a politician, the usual conglomeration of interest groups and policy preferences with a little bit of personality thrown in.
At the same time, the story follows a poet named Ona Sudak, who is stranded on an alien world, and a Conglomeration agent tasked with a secretive mission.
Charter claims that it will maintain a "superior product set at highly competitive prices," but such a massive conglomeration can and should leave consumers feeling a little uneasy.
But most in the astronomy "establishment" or "NASA," which seems to be the blanket EU term for a conglomeration of mainstream astronomers, would say EU doesn't deserve refutation.
Classical Hinduism is more a conglomeration of sects than a single religion; it has many ancient scriptures but no single, foundational text, like the Bible or the Quran.
The Republican Steering Committee — a conglomeration of top Republicans who select who sits on and leads certain House panels — will decide who will ultimately take on the role.
The only way out of this mess is to continually remind ourselves that each human is a conglomeration of identities: ethnic, racial, professional, geographic, religious and so on.
It's hard not to see the character President Taylor, who makes business deals while the world rots, as a conglomeration of the worst of Washington DC and Silicon Valley.
Mr. Burgher's "Eden Flag With Solar-Anal Emblems and Hexes," a colored-pencil conglomeration of graphic devices that suggests esoteric magic and queer desire, is charming in its evasiveness.
Plus, they're a hedge against Amazon, which draws a rising share of product searches, a looming threat to the core moneymaking part of the entire Alphabet, Google's parent conglomeration.
I believe that Black Lives Matter is a nebulous conglomeration of well-meaning activists who are fighting against this country's entrenched racism, not a hierarchal cabal plotting to kill cops.
He also sat as honorary advisor on the board of several of the country's most prominent businesses including its largest bank, Bangkok Bank and its largest conglomeration, Charoen Pokphand Group.
"Memory Piece" (21980), a compact conglomeration of found objects that occupies a prominent location in the present show, was made for her longtime advocate, the historian and curator Lowry Stokes Sims.
As a roughly tripartite coalition of college-educated whites, unionised working-class whites and non-whites, the party is a conglomeration of interests thrown together by the twists of political history.
This idea was especially appealing after the 1980s, when continued conglomeration and blockbusterization — along with the continued spread of cable — had dampened whatever creative spark remained from the auteur-driven '70s.
With a conglomeration of individuals in urban places and the density of people from all walks of life, cultures and creeds, cities have a dynamism that productively pushes our country forward.
The group Turkey currently favors — the NLF — is itself a conglomeration of more than a dozen smaller rebel groups, many of which were radical Sunni terror groups in their own right.
"Kraft merged with General Foods, which for years was nothing more than a growing conglomeration of little companies that bought each other out, which they still do all the time," Moss says.
Even if you take Peeple and its cosmetic changes at face value, you're still left with an app that treats a person like a mere conglomeration of cells destined to be judged.
Its conglomeration of tiny islands is currently home the Antarctic Peninsula's only rookery of emperor penguins, which have faced population losses in recent years due to the cascading effects of climate change.
The sun is made of plasma, a conglomeration of charged particles somewhat similar to a gas — so its various latitudes are free to move at different speeds (unlike, say a globe or basketball).
"However, I wouldn't get your hopes up because the moment the Chinese Communist [Party] decides to retaliate is the moment you give up today's gains in that gigantic conglomeration of stocks," the host said.
This summer's heavily publicized NATO exercises are, in fact, a conglomeration of small and separate maneuvers — the "Summer Shield" exercise in Latvia, for example, counted around 1,100 troops from a dozen or so countries.
Zucker, the president of CNN, is now the leading — if not the only — internal candidate being considered to become chief executive of WarnerMedia, the new conglomeration owned by AT&T that includes Warner Bros.
Let's turn to sci-fi for examples Banks' Culture is a far-future society on a galactic scale, a conglomeration of planets, space stations, and outposts administrated and organized by "Minds" — incredibly powerful artificial intelligences.
FABER: THE IDEA THAT GE SHOULD REMAIN TOGETHER ESSENTIALLY AS A CONGLOMERATION OF THESE BUSINESSES BECAUSE THERE IS A BENEFIT – FROM IT. FLANNERY: I'M OPEN TO – I'M COMMITTED TO IMPROVING THE OPERATIONS OF THE COMPANY.
The alleged deal, according to Mr. Riedel, was actually a conglomeration of nonbinding letters of intent for future business and previous deals initiated during the Obama administration, when the kingdom bought $112 billion in weapons.
Recognizing an iota of its freedom and independence would give renewed encouragement to centrifugal forces among any number of people and regions on the fringes of what is still very much a conglomeration of republics.
Seeking a way to emulate the safety of female companionship, Nico Mazza and Arianne Keegan co-founded She/Folk, a borderless conglomeration of women and women-identifying creatives, as a forum in which to share experiences.
As a West Coast native and Detroit transplant, I have had perhaps above-average exposure to the famed Diego and Frida, and "Tribute to the American Working People" startled me as a perfect conglomeration of the two.
Threat intelligence sharing has risen in prominence, giving birth to initiatives such as the Cyber Threat Alliance, a conglomeration of security solution vendors and researchers that have joined forces to collectively share information and protect their customers.
By this stage, galaxies outside of our Local Group—a conglomeration of about 54 nearby galaxies—will be moving away from us faster than their light can reach us, making them completely inobservable, and by consequence, utterly inaccessible.
After he sold that, he was able to start fresh, and later co-founded Finder, a conglomeration of websites that help people make decisions on purchases such as mortgages, flat-screen TVs or car insurance by comparing data.
Robert Zemeckis's 230 screwball toon-crime caper is often credited with kick-starting animation's second golden age of the late '22s/early '90s, with its blockbuster success — and unprecedented conglomeration of famous animated properties from Disney, Warner Bros.
It's not absurd to see Disney as an underdog that lacks resources to make their multi-billion-dollar dreams come true, rather than a near-omnipotent conglomeration just opting not to spend $65 billion in cash on new properties.
Not because I was an inordinately gifted orator, but rather because I was speaking on behalf of the United States government, an imperfect but often emulated conglomeration of agencies known throughout the world as reflecting righteousness, fairness, and truth.
For the New Yorker Who Loves Glossies When New York magazine began in 1968, it was unique: a brash conglomeration of ingenious writers, editors and graphic designers who generated narrative journalism that was so classic it became new again.
A main goal of the tours, according to Rahat's mayor, was to spruce up the image of Rahat, a drab conglomeration of low-rise buildings that is also known for its poverty and low rates of education and life expectancy.
According to The New York Times, Hudson and his fellow Hype House member Thomas Petrou had the idea to create the conglomeration of TikTokers in November 2019 and had rented their Los Angeles, California, mansion less than two weeks later.
It did support the Affordable Care Act but has more recently joined the Partnership for America's Health Care Future, a conglomeration of hospitals, drugmakers, and other industry groups that is singularly focused on opposing the new energy around Medicare-for-all.
Team: Crystal Palace South and Southeast London is a conglomeration of formerly independent villages, boroughs, towns and green spaces that have long since been incorporated into London (roughly the equivalent of the vastly different neighborhoods that make up New York City's five boroughs).
According to The New York Times, National Collegiate, a conglomeration of 15 trusts that hold 800,4.53 private student loans worth $12 billion, has recently lost multiple court cases due to bad paperwork — effectively clearing dozens of debtors of the money they owe.
The 2018 United Lenape Nations Pow Wow is unique in that it also celebrates a homecoming, with the first conglomeration of diasporic Lenape leaders on Lenapehoking — the region now known as the mid-Atlantic United States — aiming to engage a diverse audience for the occasion.
According to a conglomeration of agencies, the disaster was the product of multiple triggers: a volcanic eruption causing a 64-hectare (158-acre) chunk of Anak Krakatau to slide off the island volcano and into the ocean during a full moon at high tide.
French Polynesia, in that respect, makes an attractive locale: besides Quirk's insistence on portraying the area as a tropical paradise full of beautiful women, according to the most recent CIA data, the conglomeration of islands also boasts some of the highest unemployment in the world.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads When: Tuesday, January 93–Sunday, January 22 (prices vary) Where: Various PS122's 12-year-old annual festival is a conglomeration of performance types — virtual reality, dance, theater, "interdisciplinary"  — bringing together productions from different parts of the world.
Across a 280-hour span, Trump tweeted about topics as varied as his one-sided feud with the city of Baltimore and the Chinese economy — a confusing conglomeration, except that the tweetstorm clearly came in response to content he was watching on his favorite television stations.
With the help of American airstrikes and assistance from other powers, including Iran, a conglomeration of Iraqi government forces and militias have since reclaimed the cities of Ramadi and Falluja from the Islamic State, leaving Mosul as the militant group's last major redoubt in the country.
Many factors According to a conglomeration of agencies, the disaster was the product of multiple triggers: a volcanic eruption causing a 363-hectare (158-acre) chunk of Anak Krakatau to slide off the island volcano and into the ocean during a full moon at high tide.
I don't know whether the DSA proper will break through, or if the flag will be carried by some other organization, or if a conglomeration of a bunch of them together will shift Democratic policies left, as conservatives once upon a time took over the Republican Party.
A few nights ago, two patrons admired the new digs, and found them remarkably similar to the old ones: the entire bar has been meticulously reinstalled and restored by the Salinases, right down to an ancient conglomeration of chewed gum on the underside of one table.
Another important implication of the new study is that it could improve our understanding of how the Andromeda galaxy formed, how it's evolving, and how its role in shaping the so-called Local Group of galaxies (a conglomeration of galaxies in relatively close proximity that includes the Milky Way).
If a civ started on this project today, and if it could move its Dyson spheres at about 10 percent the speed of light, it could create a gravitationally bound conglomeration measuring 65 million light-years across (by comparison, the Milky Way is about 100 light-years in diameter).
To be clear, these entities are far from carbon copies — one is a sitting congresswoman and the other is a loose conglomeration of shock jocks, media personalities, conspiracy theorists, and trolls arguing on behalf of a billionaire president with a 41% approval rating and a 53% disapproval rating.
National Collegiate, a conglomeration of 2542 trusts that hold 21.3,20163 private student loans worth $22016 billion was forced to pay nearly $250 million in penalties and borrower refunds and may be forced to forgive over $2100 billion worth of disputed loans because of alleged "abusive and illegal " collection practices.
Orban's vision of a Europe of Fatherlands, as he calls it, is exactly what the far rightists have been calling for over decades: a conglomeration of loosely bound independent, security-minded, ethnically homogeneous countries in a zero-sum EU. The adulation of his peers has obviously swollen Orban's ego.
Standing at Morecambe, at a point where ancient open stone graves lie exposed, Goldsworthy talks of his school in Leeds, of the church where he married his (now departed) former wife, and of his famous Clougha Pike sculpture, which is a conglomeration of all his life's experiences in the aforementioned places.
" A really well-done pizza sauce will have garlic, onion and green herbs to work with the viny and sulphury part of the tomato, and when you do all of that well, "you are creating this very, very well-paired conglomeration of individual foods together to give you a unified symphony of flavors.
Adam Schwartz, a senior attorney at Electronic Frontier Foundation, told the Wall Street Journal that the focus on facial recognition meant "we are heading into a world where the government, or a conglomeration of corporations, knows potentially everywhere you've been, who you were with and what you were doing all of the time."
Other indicators of Chinese TV industry growth include the December 2017 formation of the Chinese TV Drama Export Alliance, a conglomeration of Chinese entertainment studios aimed at growing the presence of the Chinese TV productions worldwide, as well as increasing Chinese-language content being acquired by popular internet video-streaming companies such as Netflix.
Even so, during a visit some months before the Brexit vote, I armed myself with a detailed map and trolled all over South and Southeast London — a conglomeration of formerly independent villages, boroughs, towns and green spaces that have long since been incorporated into London (roughly the equivalent of the vastly different neighborhoods that make up New York City's five boroughs).
Yeah, it is a certain kind of wisdom and skill, but you're right, the conglomeration and corporatization of publishing means that a lot of acquisitions editors have very little time to actually do developmental editing and they're expected to attract works that are essentially done and then a lot of the onus is on the writer to drive audience and then the publisher gets 85 percent.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Is A Perfect Foil For The Pro-Trump Media Charlie Warzel compares AOC's mastery of social media to the president's: To be clear, these entities are far from carbon copies — one is a sitting congresswoman and the other is a loose conglomeration of shock jocks, media personalities, conspiracy theorists, and trolls arguing on behalf of a billionaire president with a 41% approval rating and a 53% disapproval rating.

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