Agglutination - meaning and definition. What is Agglutination
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is Agglutination - definition

PROCESS IN LINGUISTIC MORPHOLOGY DERIVATION IN WHICH COMPLEX WORDS ARE FORMED BY STRINGING TOGETHER MORPHEMES WITHOUT CHANGING THEM IN SPELLING OR PHONETICS
Agglutinative; Agglutinate Languages; Agglutinate; Agglutination (linguistics); Agglunative
  • Kichwa]], an agglutinative language.

agglutination         
n.
Cohesion, union, sticking together.
Agglutination         
·noun The act of uniting by glue or other tenacious substance; the state of being thus united; adhesion of parts.
II. Agglutination ·noun Combination in which root words are united with little or no change of form or loss of meaning. ·see Agglutinative, 2.
Agglutination (biology)         
  • This image explains agglutination in the blood
CLUMPING OF PARTICLES
Aggulation; Agglutination (biochemistry); Agglutination reaction; Agglutinins; Agglutination tests; Biologic agglutination; Agglutination testing
Agglutination is the clumping of particles. The word agglutination comes from the Latin [(glueing to).

Wikipedia

Agglutination

In linguistics, agglutination is a morphological process in which words are formed by stringing together morphemes, each of which corresponds to a single syntactic feature. Languages that use agglutination widely are called agglutinative languages. For example, in the agglutinative language of Turkish, the word evlerinizden ("from your houses") consists of the morphemes ev-ler-iniz-den, literally translated morpheme-by-morpheme as house-plural-your(plural)-from. Agglutinative languages are often contrasted with isolating languages, in which words are monomorphemic, and fusional languages, in which words can be complex, but morphemes may correspond to multiple features.

Examples of use of Agglutination
1. Well, he has now humbly downgraded himself from atheist to agnostic, but the matter is still essentially simple in his eyes: ‘Belief is otiose; reality is sufficiently awesome as it stands’, every religion is ‘a massive agglutination of stock responses, of clichés, of inherited and unexamined formulations’. It is therefore the opposite of art, which dares to tell the truth about the complex world.