gathered or tending to gather into a mass or whole; "aggregate expenses include expenses of all divisions combined for the entire year"; "the aggregated amount of indebtedness"
An aggregate is a number of people or things that are being considered as a single thing. society viewed as an aggregate of individuals. being the total amount of something after all the figures or points have been added together
Granular material, such as sand, gravel, crushed stone, and iron blast-furnace slag, used with a cementing medium to form a hydraulic-cement, concrete or mortar
A collection of information in which no individual information can be distinguished or identified Aggregated information can be used to determine the characteristics of a group, such as "Sixty percent of our users are over 35 "
An aggregate is an arrangement of components and connectors into a graph structure Formally, an aggregate is defined by a set of components, a set of connectors, and a set of attachments from ports of the components to roles of the connectors An aggregate representation is a representation of a component or connector by an aggregate sub-architecture In addition to the elements that an aggregate has, an aggregate representation also has a set of bindings from ports and roles inside the aggregate to ports and roles on the element that the aggregate representation represents
A granular material, such as sand, gravel, crushed stone and iron blast-furnace slag, used with a cementing medium to form a hydraulic cement concrete or mortar
Hard, inert mineral material, such as gravel, crushed rock, slag or crushed stone, used in pavement applications either by itself or for mixing with asphalt
Solid particles of low aspect ratio added to a composite material, as distinguished from the matrix and any fibers or reinforcements, especially the gravel and sand added to concrete. (technical)
(noun) A total created from smaller units For instance, the population of a county is an aggregate of the populations of the cities, rural areas, etc , that comprise the county (verb) To total data from smaller units into a large unit Example: "The Census Bureau aggregates data to preserve the confidentiality of individuals "
To bring individual power purchasers together into a group to add together (or aggregate) their electricity demand Aggregated customers will have more negotiating power with generating companies that, for example, an individual homeowner
Any one of the five bases for clinging to a sense of self: form (physical phenomena, including the body), feelings, perceptions (mental labels), thought-fabrications, consciousness
A hard inert mineral material, such as gravel, crushed rock, slag, or crushed stone, used in pavement applications either by itself or for mixing with asphalt
a group of many individual owner accounts reported in one lump sum total without names, addresses, and Social Security numbers The dollar amount that each state allows to be reported in aggregate varies (Idaho no longer requires property with a value of $50 or less to be reported, in effect eliminating aggregates in this state Although holders are not required to report these items, they may voluntarily report and remit them )
A word coined by George Olshevsky for stellations with no internal faces, such as those described in The Fifty-nine Icosahedra This is also the kind of stellation made by Great Stella They look identical from the outside to other stellations with internal faces, but may be topologically different
a sum total of many heterogenous things taken together gather in a mass, sum, or whole gathered or tending to gather into a mass or whole; "aggregate expenses include expenses of all divisions combined for the entire year"; "the aggregated amount of indebtedness"
An aggregate amount or score is made up of several smaller amounts or scores added together. England have beaten the Welsh three times in succession with an aggregate score of 83-12. Aggregate is also a noun. The highest aggregate came in the third round where Leeds and Middlesbrough drew 4-4
A coarse material, such as gravel, broken stone or sand, with which cement and water are mixed to form concrete Crushed stone is usually designated as coarse aggregate and sand as fine aggregate