Aggregating
formed by the conjunction or collection of particulars into a whole m-ss or sum; total; combined:
the aggregate amount of indebtedness.
botany.
(of a flower) formed of florets collected in a dense cl-ster but not cohering, as the daisy.
(of a fruit) composed of a cl-ster of carpels belonging to the same flower, as the raspberry.
geology. (of a rock) consisting of a mixture of minerals separable by mechanical means.
a sum, m-ss, or -ssemblage of particulars; a total or gross amount:
the aggregate of all past experience.
a cl-ster of soil granules not larger than a small crumb.
any of various loose, particulate materials, as sand, gravel, or pebbles, added to a cementing agent to make concrete, plaster, etc.
mathematics, (def 92).
to bring together; collect into one sum, m-ss, or body.
to amount to (the number of):
the guns captured will aggregate five or six hundred.
to combine and form a collection or m-ss.
in the aggregate, taken or considered as a whole:
in the aggregate, our losses have been relatively small.
contemporary examples
how does aggregating non-corrupt contributions render them corrupt?
the court case that pivots on what ‘corrupt’ really means lawrence lessig september 25, 2013
but there is intrade, an online betting ring that does a decent job of aggregating conventional wisdom.
romney’s intrade stock: ready for a bull run? alex klein august 13, 2012
historical examples
the holiday in the isle of man had resulted in two quarto note books, aggregating ninety-six pages, closely written in pencil.
the life of george borrow herbert jenkins
in 1908 there were 21 public parks, aggregating more than 1335 acres.
encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 13, slice 1 various
his street-car investments, aggregating fifty thousand, were paying six per cent.
the financier theodore dreiser
this is particularly the case with the family debts, often aggregating a large sum.
village life in china arthur h. smith
it meets the requisitions of the philosophical understanding, as well as of the shaping and aggregating fancy.
the atlantic monthly, vol. 13, no. 76, february, 1864 various
ten farms, aggregating 258 acres, are operated by negroes as cash tenants.
twentieth century negro literature various
thus, in 1898 there were six entries, aggregating five hundred dollars.
the confession mary roberts rinehart
in this there were employed five german army corps, aggregating nearly 300,000 men.
the battles in flanders from ypres to neuve chapelle edmund dane
adjective (ˈæɡrɪɡɪt; -ˌɡeɪt)
formed of separate units collected into a whole; collective; corporate
(of fruits and flowers) composed of a dense cl-ster of carpels or florets
noun (ˈæɡrɪɡɪt; -ˌɡeɪt)
a sum or -ssemblage of many separate units; sum total
(geology) a rock, such as granite, consisting of a mixture of minerals
the sand and stone mixed with cement and water to make concrete
a group of closely related biotypes produced by apomixis, such as brambles, which are the rubus fruticosus aggregate
in the aggregate, taken as a whole
verb (ˈæɡrɪˌɡeɪt)
to combine or be combined into a body, etc
(transitive) to amount to (a number)
adj.
c.1400, from latin aggregatus “-ssociated,” literally “united in a flock,” past participle of aggregare “add to (a flock), lead to a flock, bring together (in a flock),” from ad- “to” (see ad-) + gregare “herd” (see gregarious).
v.
c.1400, from latin aggregatum, neuter past participle of aggregare (see aggregate (adj.)). related: aggregated; aggregating.
n.
“number of persons, things, etc., regarded as a unit,” early 15c., from noun use of latin adjective aggregatum, neuter of aggregatus (see aggregate (adj.)).
aggregate ag·gre·gate (āg’rĭ-gĭt)
adj.
crowded or m-ssed into a dense cl-ster. n.
a total considered with reference to its const-tuent parts; a gross amount in a m-ss or cl-ster. v. ag·gre·gat·ed, ag·gre·gat·ing, ag·gre·gates (-gāt’)
to gather into a m-ss, sum, or whole.
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a group or m-ss of distinct or varied things, persons, etc.: an aggregation of complainants. collection into an unorganized whole. the state of being so collected. biology, ecology. a group of organisms of the same or different species living closely together but less integrated than a society. contemporary examples aggregation lives on the cheat sheet, […]
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a group or m-ss of distinct or varied things, persons, etc.: an aggregation of complainants. collection into an unorganized whole. the state of being so collected. biology, ecology. a group of organisms of the same or different species living closely together but less integrated than a society. noun the act or process of aggregating (ecology) […]
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of or relating to an . forming or tending to form an . historical examples fancy is aggregative and -ssociative,—imagination is creative, motive. rab and his friends and other papers john brown i reckon i might have been too aggregative in my tabulation. roads of destiny o. henry are you not, in general, exaggerating the […]
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a person or thing that . digital technology. a web-based or installed application that aggregates related, frequently updated content from various internet sources and consolidates it in one place for viewing: an automated news aggregator. compare (def 23), . a company that negotiates the purchase of public-utility services on behalf of a group of customers […]
- Aggregatory
formed by the conjunction or collection of particulars into a whole m-ss or sum; total; combined: the aggregate amount of indebtedness. botany. (of a flower) formed of florets collected in a dense cl-ster but not cohering, as the daisy. (of a fruit) composed of a cl-ster of carpels belonging to the same flower, as the […]