Definition of Reaggregation

1. aggregation [n -S] - See also: aggregation

Lexicographical Neighbors of Reaggregation

reagants
reagency
reagent
reagent strips
reagents
reaggravate
reaggravated
reaggravates
reaggravating
reaggravation
reaggravations
reaggregate
reaggregated
reaggregates
reaggregating
reaggregation (current term)
reaggregations
reagin
reaginic
reaginic antibody
reagins
reagree
reagreed
reagreeing
reair
reaired
reairing
reairs
reais
reak

Literary usage of Reaggregation

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Silver Bromide Grain of Photographic Emulsions by Adrian Peter Herman Trivelli, Samuel Edward Sheppard (1921)
"The minutiae of the recrystallization and reaggregation process induced by ... The reaggregation or alteration of dispersity will be discussed later, ..."

2. The Silver Bromide Grain of Photographic Emulsions by Adrian Peter Herman Trivelli, Samuel Edward Sheppard (1921)
"The fact that in the absence of light action the reaggregation by fuming starts ... The simplest explanation is that reaggregation and recrystallization are ..."

3. Considerations on Volcanos: The Probable Causes of Their Phenomena, the Laws by George Poulett Scrope (1825)
"... but the poles of these crystals no longer correspond, and their proximate plane surfaces are no longer parallel: consequently their reaggregation, ..."

4. Isis Unveiled: A Master-key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1892)
"Its particles, gradually obeying the disorganizing attraction of universal space, finally fly asunder beyond the possibility of reaggregation. ..."

5. The Popular Science Monthly (1877)
"And then we have monogamy habitual with nations which have become vast by aggregation and reaggregation. Polyandry, again, is not restricted to societies of ..."

6. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1858)
"... the filaments spontaneously dissolving, and, by a reaggregation of the saline particles, forming minute dumb-bells in the whole line of those filaments. ..."

7. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1920)
"Order dominates in the end through the ejection of discordant forces and their reaggregation in new cosmic forms. To this medial plane the concept of ..."

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