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View synonyms for aggregate

aggregate

[ adjective noun ag-ri-git, -geyt; verb ag-ri-geyt ]

adjective

  1. formed by the conjunction or collection of particulars into a whole mass or sum; total; combined:

    the aggregate amount of indebtedness.

    Synonyms: whole, complete

  2. Botany.
    1. (of a flower) formed of florets collected in a dense cluster but not cohering, as the daisy.
    2. (of a fruit) composed of a cluster of carpels belonging to the same flower, as the raspberry.
  3. Geology. (of a rock) consisting of a mixture of minerals separable by mechanical means.


noun

  1. a sum, mass, or assemblage of particulars; a total or gross amount:

    the aggregate of all past experience.

  2. a cluster of soil particles: an aggregate larger than 250 micrometers in diameter, as the size of a small crumb, is technically regarded as a macroaggregate.
  3. any of various loose, particulate materials, as sand, gravel, or pebbles, added to a cementing agent to make concrete, plaster, etc.
  4. Mathematics. set ( def 92 ).

verb (used with object)

, ag·gre·gat·ed, ag·gre·gat·ing.
  1. to bring together; collect into one sum, mass, or body.

    Synonyms: gather, accumulate, amass, assemble

  2. to amount to (the number of ):

    The guns captured will aggregate five or six hundred.

verb (used without object)

, ag·gre·gat·ed, ag·gre·gat·ing.
  1. to combine and form a collection or mass.

aggregate

/ ˈæɡrɪˌɡeɪtɪv /

adjective

  1. formed of separate units collected into a whole; collective; corporate
  2. (of fruits and flowers) composed of a dense cluster of carpels or florets


noun

  1. a sum or assemblage of many separate units; sum total
  2. geology a rock, such as granite, consisting of a mixture of minerals
  3. the sand and stone mixed with cement and water to make concrete
  4. a group of closely related biotypes produced by apomixis, such as brambles, which are the Rubus fruticosus aggregate
  5. in the aggregate
    in the aggregate taken as a whole

verb

  1. to combine or be combined into a body, etc
  2. tr to amount to (a number)

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Derived Forms

  • ˈaggregately, adverb
  • aggregative, adjective

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Other Words From

  • ag·gre·ga·ble [ag, -ri-g, uh, -b, uh, l], adjective
  • ag·gre·gate·ly adjective
  • ag·gre·gate·ness noun
  • ag·gre·ga·to·ry [ag, -ri-g, uh, -tawr-ee, -tohr-ee], adjective
  • hy·per·ag·gre·gate verb hyperaggregated hyperaggregating
  • re·ag·gre·gate verb reaggregated reaggregating
  • sub·ag·gre·gate adjective noun
  • sub·ag·gre·gate·ly adverb
  • un·ag·gre·gat·ed adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of aggregate1

First recorded in 1375–1425; late Middle English, from Latin aggregātus (past participle of aggregāre ), equivalent to ag- ag- + greg- (stem of grex “flock”) + -ātus -ate 1

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Word History and Origins

Origin of aggregate1

C16: from Latin aggregāre to add to a flock or herd, attach (oneself) to, from grex flock

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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. in the aggregate, taken or considered as a whole:

    In the aggregate, our losses have been relatively small.

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Example Sentences

For aggregate outcomes, we run millions of simulations using the individual race predictions to derive the range of possible overall outcomes for the electoral college and both chambers of Congress.

From Ozy

After calculating probabilities for each individual House and Senate race, we then turn our attention to predicting the aggregate number of seats we expect the GOP to win and the probability of maintaining control of the House and Senate.

From Ozy

Among the 10 banks with the largest increases, criticized loans rose by 62 percent in aggregate in the second quarter, but criticized commercial real estate loans rose by 144 percent, to $26 billion, according to an analysis by the Financial Times.

From Ozy

Aggregated versions of both data sets will be released to challenge participants, and researchers can request special access to anonymized, de-aggregated versions of the data if they need it.

Thus, they’ve used SherloQ to aggregate their data from phone calls, chats, emails, and organic and paid marketing.

But in the aggregate, immigration reform is not a salient issue for white evangelicals.

Their hub is an aggregate of photographs and eyewitness reports taken by hundreds of collectives.

Many runways are asphaltic concrete—aggregate in a bitumen binder—which softens and melts under heat.

And what Navfac calls “standard airfield concrete” is military-grade, made with aggregate and Portland cement.

Harkin noted the effect raising the wage would have in increasing aggregate demand and boosting the economy in a floor speech.

The act of the Covenanting Society is complex, and is the aggregate of the actings of all who compose it.

But in their aggregate the representations look well, and they give a good finish to the chancel.

It was not so much that the "offer of the House" increased the aggregate population of the workhouses.

All these are administered by local boards, whose aggregate revenue amounts to some 7000.

The aggregate which we call four, has a still greater number of characteristic modes of formation.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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aggravationaggregate fruit