Definition of Reaggregates

1. reaggregate [v] - See also: reaggregate

Lexicographical Neighbors of Reaggregates

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

Literary usage of Reaggregates

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

1. Reviews in Environmental Health (1998): Toxicological Defense Mechanics edited by Gary E. R. Hook, George W. Lucier (2000)
"After 2 days these reaggregates have a stable diameter of 0.15 to 0.8 mm depending ... Like explants/slices, a general disadvantage of reaggregates is the ..."

2. The Land Systems of British India: Being a Manual of the Land-tenures and of by Baden Henry Baden-Powell (1892)
"... who by virtue persists in subdividing beyond of them then become mere tenants fall into hopeless poverty and decay, of his sale-title reaggregates the ..."

3. Soil Physics and Rice by International Rice Research Institute (1985)
"Those peds appear to be a complex of two structural types: one reaggregates from mud after draining, and one remains degraded under reducing conditions ..."

4. Volcanos: The Character of Their Phenomena, Their Share in the Structure and by George Poulett Scrope (1872)
"... a proportionate diminution of temperature (or increase of pressure) reaggregates them in a solid mass, though not always in the same crystalline forms. ..."

5. A Textbook of Elementary Biology by Robert John Harvey-Gibson (1889)
"The nucleus (of the reproductive cell of the pollen grain) reaggregates and appears in the ovum, with the nucleus of which it fuses, completing the act of ..."

6. Volcanos: The Character of Their Phenomena, Their Share in the Structure and by George Poulett Scrope (1862)
"... a proportionate diminution of temperature (or increase of pressure) reaggregates them in a solid mass, though not always in the same crystalline forms. ..."

7. Volcanos. The character of their phenomena [&c.].: The Character of Their by George Poulett Scrope (1862)
"... a proportionate diminution of temperature (or increase of pressure) reaggregates them in a solid mass, though not always in the same crystalline forms. ..."

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