Word Meanings - AGGLUTINATE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
To unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue or other viscous substance; to unite by causing an adhesion of substances.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of AGGLUTINATE)
Related words: (words related to AGGLUTINATE)
- ACCUMULATE
To heap up in a mass; to pile up; to collect or bring together; to amass; as, to accumulate a sum of money. Syn. -- To collect; pile up; store; amass; gather; aggregate; heap together; hoard. - ENTANGLE
1. To twist or interweave in such a manner as not to be easily separated; to make tangled, confused, and intricate; as, to entangle yarn or the hair. 2. To involve in such complications as to render extrication a bewildering difficulty; hence, - CONFUSE
Mixed; confounded. Baret. - AMALGAMATE; AMALGAMATED
Coalesced; united; combined. - ENTANGLEMENT
State of being entangled; intricate and confused involution; that which entangles; intricacy; perplexity. - CONFUSEDNESS
A state of confusion. Norris. - CONFUSEDLY
In a confused manner. - CONFUSELY
Confusedly; obscurely. - AGGLUTINATE
To unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue or other viscous substance; to unite by causing an adhesion of substances. - AGGLOMERATE; AGGLOMERATED
Collected into a rounded head of flowers. (more info) 1. Collected into a ball, heap, or mass. - AGGLOMERATE
To wind or collect into a ball; hence, to gather into a mass or anything like a mass. Where he builds the agglomerated pile. Cowper. - AMALGAMATE
1. To compound or mix, as quicksilver, with another metal; to unite, combine, or alloy with mercury. 2. To mix, so as to make a uniform compound; to unite or combine; as, to amalgamate two races; to amalgamate one race with another. Ingratitude - CONGLOMERATE
Closely crowded together; densly clustered; as, conglomerate flowers. Gray. (more info) 1. Gathered into a ball or a mass; collected together; concentrated; as, conglomerate rays of light. Beams of light when they are multiplied and conglomerate. - ENTANGLER
One that entangles. - DISENTANGLE
1. To free from entanglement; to release from a condition of being intricately and confusedly involved or interlaced; to reduce to orderly arrangement; to straighten out; as, to disentangle a skein of yarn. 2. To extricate from complication and - INCONFUSED
Not confused; distinct. - UNENTANGLE
To disentangle. - PENTANGLE
A pentagon. Sir T. Browne. - DISENTANGLEMENT
The act of disentangling or clearing from difficulties. Warton.