Are you spelling that right? Could it be aggregate? Gregarious?
ag·gre·gate adjective, noun, verb, -gat·ed, -gat·ing.
–adjective 1. formed by the conjunction or collection of particulars into a whole mass or sum; total; combined: the aggregate amount of indebtedness.
2. Botany. a. (of a flower) formed of florets collected in a dense cluster but not cohering, as the daisy.
b. (of a fruit) composed of a cluster of carpels belonging to the same flower, as the raspberry.
3. Geology. (of a rock) consisting of a mixture of minerals separable by mechanical means.
–noun 4. a sum, mass, or assemblage of particulars; a total or gross amount: the aggregate of all past experience.
5. a cluster of soil granules not larger than a small crumb.
6. any of various loose, particulate materials, as sand, gravel, or pebbles, added to a cementing agent to make concrete, plaster, etc.
7. Mathematics. set (def. 92).
–verb (used with object) 8. to bring together; collect into one sum, mass, or body.
9. to amount to (the number of): The guns captured will aggregate five or six hundred.
–verb (used without object) 10. to combine and form a collection or mass.
—Idiom11. in the aggregate, taken or considered as a whole: In the aggregate, our losses have been relatively small.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Origin: 1375–1425; late ME < L aggregātus (ptp. of aggregāre), equiv. to ag- ag- + greg- (s. of grex flock) + -ātus -ate1]
2007-09-16 02:56:51
·
answer #1
·
answered by ghouly05 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
Could also be "segregated" - separated, split apart.
2007-09-16 10:05:13
·
answer #2
·
answered by picador 7
·
0⤊
0⤋