ppl. a. [f. AGGLOMERATE v. + -ED.] Collected into a heap or mass.
1. Gathered into a ball or spherical mass.
1742. Young, Night Th., IX. 1911. And creations, In one agglomerated cluster, hung.
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.
2. Collected in a mass or heap; piled together; rudely or loosely united, without any mutual adaptation of parts.
1774. A. Campbell, Lexiph. (ed. 4), 6. Agglomerated asperities which may obumbrate your intellectual luminaries.
1784. Cowper, Task, III. 472. He builds Th agglomerated pile.
1878. A. C. Ramsay, Phys. Geogr., xiii. 207. It is formed chiefly of the agglomerated shells of Paludina.