Webster's 1828 Dictionary
AGGLUTINATIVE
a.That tends to unite, or has power to cause adhesion.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
AGGLUTINATIVE
Ag *glu "ti *na *tive, a. Etym: [Cf. F. agglutinatif.]
1. Pertaining to agglutination; tending to unite, or having power to cause adhesion; adhesive.
2. (Philol.)
Defn: Formed or characterized by agglutination, as a language or a compound. In agglutinative languages the union of words may be compared to mechanical compounds, in inflective languages to chemical compounds.R. Morris. Cf. man-kind, heir-loom, war-like, which are agglutinative compounds. The Finnish, Hungarian, Turkish, the Tamul, etc. , are agglutinative languages. R. Morris. Agglutinative languages preserve the consciousness of their roots. Max Müller.
New American Oxford Dictionary
agglutinative
ag glu ti na tive |əˈglo͞otn -ətiv əˈɡluːtɪnətɪv | ▶adjective Linguistics (of a language ) forming words predominantly by agglutination, rather than by inflection or by using isolated elements. Examples include Hungarian, Turkish, Korean, and Swahili.
Oxford Dictionary
agglutinative
agglutinative |əˈgluːtɪnətɪv | ▶adjective Linguistics (of a language, e.g. Hungarian, Turkish, Korean, and Swahili ) tending to express concepts in complex words consisting of many elements, rather than by inflection or by using isolated elements. Contrasted with analytic and synthetic.
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
agglutinative
ag glu ti na tive /əɡlúːt (ə )nèɪtɪv |-tɪnə -/形容詞 膠着 (こうちやく )する ; 〘言 〙膠着 (性 )の .~̀ l á nguage 〘言 〙膠着言語 〘日本語 朝鮮語 トルコ語など 〙.