conglobate
English
Etymology
from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Latin conglobare, from com- (“together”) + globus (“ball”)
Adjective
conglobate (comparative more conglobate, superlative most conglobate)
- Shaped like or formed into a ball.
- 1705, George Cheyne, “Of the Existence of a Deity”, in Philosophical Principles of Natural Religion: […], London: Printed for George Strahan […], →OCLC, § XXXV, page 213:
- By the motion of the Heart, through the Emulgent Branches, the Blood is brought to the Kidneys, and is there freed of its Serum by their little Glands, […] Much after the ſame manner, are their proper Fluids ſeparated from the Blood in the Liver, Sweetbread, Teſticles, and the other Conglobat and Conglomerate Glands of the Body […].
Translations
shaped like or formed into a ball
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Verb
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- (transitive) To form into a globe or ball.
Derived terms
Related terms
See also
Italian
Verb
conglobate
- second-person plural present indicative of conglobare
- second-person plural imperative of conglobare
- feminine plural of conglobato
Latin
Verb
(deprecated template usage) conglobāte