Agglomerated in a sentence as an adjective

I think it's a kind of path-dependency in how Anglo-American common law was agglomerated.

The behavior really seemed to be something that just agglomerated as the author had added features, rather than something planned with a design philosophy behind it.

Searle thinks understanding is fundamentally unspeakable, whereas I think it can indeed arise as the consequence of agglomerated abstraction.

Once their own dirty laundry is exposed for all to see, they'll try the usual gambits about staffers' unauthorized usage, etc., but it will be crystal clear to all just what happens when all that information is agglomerated.

That was part of it - to my mind, the title was this agglomerated collection of words that needed decoding: "what's the noun / verb / etc.... ack, to heck with it, I'll click on the article and figure it out from there"I know there's a limit on title length.

On the other hand, a lot of the most popular Python libraries became effectively standard and lots of people agglomerated around them instead of creating competing standards because it would be hard for any smaller team to replicate even their base functionality.

I find this really fascinating and some believe that ancient Egypt also created its pyramids using man-made stone instead of quarried stone:> His most remarkable claim is that the pyramids were built using re-agglomerated stone, a sort of geopolymer limestone concrete, rather than blocks of natural stone.

Nice little bit of criticism of the Hackney council and I like the summary of the startup scene in general: A common pattern in startups is to go to work for one, \n watch it implode and team up with a colleague or two to \n move on to another startup; repeat several times until you \n have agglomerated a bunch of people you know, like and \n trust; then do your own startup with them.

Agglomerated definitions

adjective

clustered together but not coherent; "an agglomerated flower head"

See also: agglomerate agglomerative clustered