English-Thai Dictionary
agglutinate
ADJ ซึ่ง ติดกัน sueng-tid-kan
agglutinate
VI เกาะติด กัน ko-tid-kan
agglutinate
VT ทำให้ เกาะติด กัน join tham-hai-ko-tid-kan
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
AGGLUTINATE
v.t.[Lat. agglutino, ad and glutino, from gluten. Eng. glue. See Glue. ] To unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue or other viscous substance; to unite by causing an adhesion of substances.
AGGLUTINATED
pp. Glued together; united by a viscous substance.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
AGGLUTINATE
Ag *glu "ti *nate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Agglutinated; p. pr. & vb. n.Agglutinating. ] Etym: [L. agglutinatus, p. p. of agglutinare to glue or cement to a thing; ad + glutinare to glue; gluten glue. See Glue. ]
Defn: To unite, or cause to adhere, as with glue or other viscous substance; to unite by causing an adhesion of substances.
AGGLUTINATE
AGGLUTINATE Ag *glu "ti *nate, a.
1. United with glue or as with glue; cemented together.
2. (physiol.)
Defn: Consisting of root words combined but not materially altered as to form or meaning; as, agglutinate forms, languages, etc. See Agglutination, 2.
New American Oxford Dictionary
agglutinate
ag glu ti nate |əˈglo͞otnˌāt əˈɡlutneɪt | ▶verb firmly stick or be stuck together to form a mass: (as adj. agglutinated ) : rhinoceros horns are agglutinated masses of hair. • Biology (with reference to bacteria or red blood cells ) clump together: [ with obj. ] : these strains agglutinate human red cells | [ no obj. ] : cell fragments agglutinate and form intricate meshes. • [ with obj. ] Linguistics combine (simple words or parts of words ) without change of form to express compound ideas. DERIVATIVES ag glu ti na tion |əˌglo͞otnˈāSHən |noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Latin agglutinat- ‘caused to adhere, ’ from the verb agglutinare, from ad- ‘to ’ + glutinare (from gluten ‘glue ’).
Oxford Dictionary
agglutinate
agglutinate |əˈgluːtɪneɪt | ▶verb firmly stick or be stuck together to form a mass: (as adj. agglutinated ) : rhinoceros horns are agglutinated masses of hair. • Biology (with reference to bacteria or red blood cells ) clump together. • [ with obj. ] Linguistics (of a language ) combine (word elements ) to express compound ideas. DERIVATIVES agglutination noun ORIGIN mid 16th cent.: from Latin agglutinat- ‘caused to adhere ’, from the verb agglutinare, from ad- ‘to ’ + glutinare (from gluten ‘glue ’).