different between conglobate vs conglobated
conglobate
English
Etymology
from Latin conglobare, from com- (“together”) + globus (“ball”)
Adjective
conglobate (comparative more conglobate, superlative most conglobate)
- Shaped like or formed into a ball.
Translations
Verb
conglobate (third-person singular simple present conglobates, present participle conglobating, simple past and past participle conglobated)
- (transitive) To form into a globe or ball.
- 1850, Thomas Cooper, The Purgatory of Suicides: A Prison-Rhyme, second edition:
- 1850, Thomas Cooper, The Purgatory of Suicides: A Prison-Rhyme, second edition:
Derived terms
- conglobately
- conglobation
- conglobateous
Related terms
- conglobe
- globe
See also
- round
- spherical
Italian
Verb
conglobate
- second-person plural present indicative of conglobare
- second-person plural imperative of conglobare
- feminine plural of conglobato
Latin
Verb
conglob?te
- second-person plural present active imperative of conglob?
conglobate From the web:
- conglobate meaning
- what is conglobate acne
- what does conglobate mean
- what causes conglobate acne
- what does conglobate
- conglobate definition
conglobated
English
Verb
conglobated
- simple past tense and past participle of conglobate
conglobated From the web:
- conglobate meaning
- what does conglomerate mean
- what is conglobate acne
- what causes conglobate acne
- what does conglobate
- conglobate definition
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