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congeries
[ kon-jeer-eez, kon-juh-reez ]
noun
From the airplane the town resembled a congeries of tiny boxes.
congeries
/ kɒnˈdʒɪəriːz /
noun
- functioning as singular or plural a collection of objects or ideas; mass; heap
Word History and Origins
Origin of congeries1
Word History and Origins
Origin of congeries1
Example Sentences
My own are his pansy collages, tightly packed, edge-to-edge congeries of overlapping floral faces that give off a bright radiance as well as well as a sense of menacing, staring eyes.
A novel loosely holding together distinct histories and temporalities effectively dramatizes a society that is a congeries of ancient and new, old lore and tradition bumping up against thoroughly modern ambitions and expertise.
Does that justify corporate managers spending ever-shifting congeries of their shareholders’ money, without consulting them, on political campaign contributions and ads to sway citizens’ decisions about which officials should regulate the corporations themselves?
The sixties may be just another decade, but The Sixties are something more – a mood, a state of mind, a way of life, a congeries of sounds and images.
The first, titled “The Book,” describes a strange bookshop, a “congeries/ Of crumbling elder lore.”
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