ppl. a. [f. AGGLOMERATE v. + -ED.] Collected into a heap or mass.

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  1.  Gathered into a ball or spherical mass.

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1742.  Young, Night Th., IX. 1911. And creations, In one agglomerated cluster, hung.

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1858.  Lewes, Sea-side Studies, 259/2. One of my Daisies (A. Bellis) brought forth a round mass of fifteen young, agglomerated together into a ball.

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  2.  Collected in a mass or heap; piled together; rudely or loosely united, without any mutual adaptation of parts.

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1774.  A. Campbell, Lexiph. (ed. 4), 6. Agglomerated asperities which may obumbrate your intellectual luminaries.

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1784.  Cowper, Task, III. 472. He builds Th’ agglomerated pile.

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1878.  A. C. Ramsay, Phys. Geogr., xiii. 207. It is formed chiefly of the agglomerated shells of Paludina.

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