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confluent

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

From Latin cōnfluēns, present participle of cōnfluō.

Pronunciation

Adjective

confluent (comparative more confluent, superlative most confluent)

  1. Converging, merging or flowing together into one.
  2. (meteorology, of wind) Converging, especially as viewed on a weather chart.
  3. (biology) Describing cells in a culture that merge to form a mass.
  4. (geometry, of a triangle) Exactly the same size as another triangle.
  5. (mathematics) Given a binary operation on a set A, and its reflexive, transitive closure , then, for all a1, a2, and a3 in A, if a1 a2 and a1 a3, then there must exist an a4 in A such that a2 a4 and a3 a4.

Derived terms

Noun

confluent (plural confluents)

  1. A stream uniting and flowing with another; a confluent stream.
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French

French Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia fr

Pronunciation

Adjective

confluent (feminine confluente, masculine plural confluents, feminine plural confluentes)

  1. confluent

Noun

confluent m (plural confluents)

  1. confluence (point where two rivers or streams meet)

Verb

confluent

  1. third-person plural present indicative/subjunctive of confluer

Further reading

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Latin

Verb

cōnfluent

  1. third-person plural future active indicative of cōnfluō

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French confluent, from Latin confluens.

Adjective

confluent m or n (feminine singular confluentă, masculine plural confluenți, feminine/neuter plural confluente)

  1. confluent

Declension

More information singular, plural ...

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