agglomerations in English

noun
1
a mass or collection of things; an assemblage.
the arts center is an agglomeration of theaters, galleries, shops, restaurants, and bars

Use "agglomerations" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "agglomerations" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "agglomerations", or refer to the context using the word "agglomerations" in the English Dictionary.

1. Rounded agglomerations of Botryoidal aggregates are smaller than reniform agglomerations and considerably smaller than mammilary agglomerations.

2. America's Urban Agglomerations Urban Agglomerations are contiguous areas of continuously developed urban territories

3. Establishment of zones and agglomerations

4. - until 31 December 2010 for oxidisability in agglomerations with less than 10000 inhabitants;

5. Aggenerations; aggers; agglomerations; agglutinations; agglutinins; aggrandisements; aggrandizations; aggrandizements; aggrandizers; aggravations; aggregators; aggrievances; aggrievements; …

6. A confused or jumbled mass: "To avoid the problems of large urban Agglomerations, the state

7. Member States shall ensure that all agglomerations are provided with collecting systems for urban waste water,

8. Table 11-29: Treatment level of agglomerations discharging into sensitive areas, designated in 1994

9. Some states counted administrative areas as urban units, and some counted agglomerations of a certain number of people.

10. India's 27.8 percent urban population lives in more than 5,100 towns and over 380 urban agglomerations.

11. removal of very small currants, agglomerations of currants, bits of stalk and plant matter from the vineyard,

12. A confused or jumbled mass: "To avoid the problems of large urban Agglomerations, the state decentralized …

13. removal of very small currants, agglomerations of currants, bits of stalk and plant matter from the vineyard

14. For many agglomerations and/or treatment plants different loads were reported for the years 1998 and 1999.

15. Agglomeration (countable and uncountable, plural Agglomerations) The act or process of collecting in a mass; a heaping together

16. At the end of 2000, Ireland had 28 agglomerations above 15 000 p.e., which discharged into "normal areas".

17. As opposed to this, modern agglomerations will be best off, not least because of their stronger power to shift the burden.

18. The four largest urban agglomerations Greater Mumbai, Kolkata, Delhi and Chennai are home to 15% of India's urban population.

19. - at the latest by 31 December 2000 for all discharges from agglomerations of more than 15 000 p.e.

20. Constituents of lemons in chilled or frozen form, including in the form of agglomerations of natural lemon cells

21. Most people stand in awe of these agglomerations of power, admit their inability to fight them, and submit.

22. 6). The protomerite contains in addition to the usual cell organites cytoplasmic agglomerations consisting of endoplasmic reticulum, ribonucleoprotein and peripheric mitochondria.

23. Therefore, these data do no seem to show the real size of the agglomerations and use to capacity of plants.

24. 30 June 2007 | Strategic noise maps for major roads, railways, airports and agglomerations according to the upper thresholds, | Art. 7-1 |

25. Congestion, that is prevalent in agglomerations and in their access routes, is the source of large costs in terms of delays and higher fuel consumption.

26. Urbanization and the knowledge economy are two concepts which are interlinked and therefore agglomerations are nowadays often considered as the centres of innovation.

27. Computing became decentralized, and the new flexibility produced a sense that control was moving away from big agglomerations of power – whether governments or companies.

28. 30 June 2012 | Strategic noise maps for major roads, railways, airports and agglomerations according to the lower thresholds, | Art. 7-2 | Mandatory every 5 years |

29. The NANOFLOC system works by destabilising nano suspensions and agglomerations of charged nanoparticles in solutions by applying electric fields, thus avoiding the need for chemicals.

30. - The biggest or most important nodes, such as MS capitals, other cities or agglomerations of supra-regional importance in administration, economy, social and cultural life and transport;

31. ‘Where, in given zones or agglomerations, the levels of pollutants in ambient air exceed any limit value or target value, plus any relevant margin of tolerance in each case, Member States shall ensure that air quality plans are established for those zones and agglomerations in order to achieve the related limit value or target value specified in Annexes XI and XIV.

32. Agglomeration The most complicated environment - the one consisting of dense Agglomerations of people, their dwellings, their means of production, their roads, and their vehicles - are also the most …

33. Mixtures or agglomerations of one or more of diatomite, perlite, kaolin, calcined kaolin and / or talc, for use as filtration and / or processing aids in the wine industry

34. The public passenger transport service or the public service contract referred to in the first subparagraph may only cover the transport needs of urban agglomerations or rural areas, or both.

35. Electricity and hydrogen are particularly attractive power sources for the deployment of electric/fuel cell vehicles and L-category vehicles in urban/suburban agglomerations and other densely populated areas, which can contribute to improving air quality and reducing noise.

36. Agglomerations make it possible for firms to form and maintain linkages with each other within various kinds of networks, through both formal interactions and ‘untraded interdependencies’ (which include labor markets, public institutions, habits, and understandings)

37. It should apply to the residents of urban agglomerations as well as those living in rural areas, people living in the centre of Europe as well as those on the peripheries, the younger generation as well as elderly people.

38. It stated that all water discharged into the Baltic Sea, including the Bothnian Bay and Sea, by treatment plants of urban waste water from agglomerations of more than 10 000 p.e. had to undergo removal treatment both of phosphorus and of nitrogen.

39. We analyse spatial patterns of change for different qualification groups, outlining a regional typology, and discuss issues of ageing as well as differentiations according to types of settlement structure; finally, centre-periphery developments in two selected urban agglomerations are addressed (Berlin and Rhein-Ruhr).

40. Technology and better physical connectivity will allow areas of lesser industrial development to also grow rapidly in shorter periods of time as production shifts to such areas on account established agglomerations having become more and more expensive- this will allow disaggregation and spread of both urbanisation and of incomes.

41. In zones and agglomerations where the levels of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, PM10, PM2,5, lead, benzene and carbon monoxide in ambient air are below the respective limit values specified in Annexes XI and XIV, Member States shall maintain the levels of those pollutants below the limit values and shall endeavour to preserve the best ambient air quality, compatible with sustainable development.

42. That entails providing assistance in establishing major agglomerations of States that are capable of mobilizing efforts to ensure prosperity based on economies of scale, as well as full inclusion of individuals and State bodies set up to bring an end to widespread poverty among entire groups of the population who have been plunged into extreme poverty by the distortions of the global economic system.

43. Within such zones and agglomerations Member States shall prepare plans or programmes in accordance with Article 8(3) of Directive 96/62/EC for attaining an annual average concentration of 1.0 μg/m3 by 1 January 2005 and for attaining the limit value set out in Annex IV as soon as possible thereafter and in any event no later than 1 January 2010.

44. 134 Since exceptional circumstances and the concept of ‘best technical knowledge not entailing excessive costs’ are relied on in order to justify the situations in which a system for treating urban waste water does not fulfil the requirements of Article 4 of Directive 91/271, it is appropriate at the outset to determine whether the evidence submitted by the Commission is capable of justifying in law the second complaint as regards each of the agglomerations covered by it.