amalgamation
English
Etymology
From Medieval Latin amalgamātiō.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /əˌmælɡəˈmeɪʃən/
Audio (Southern England) (file) Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -eɪʃən
- Hyphenation: a‧mal‧ga‧ma‧tion
Noun
amalgamation (countable and uncountable, plural amalgamations)
- The process of amalgamating; a mixture, merger or consolidation.
- 1958, Albert Feuerwerker, China's Early Industrialization, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, →LCCN, →OCLC, →OL, page 68:
- In 1908 Sheng obtained imperial approval for the amalgamation of the Hanyang Ironworks and the Ta-yeh and P'ing-hsiang mines to form the Han-Yeh-P'ing Coal and Iron Company Limited (Han-Yeh-P'ing mei-t'ieh ch'ang-k'uang yu-hsien kung-ssu).
- The result of amalgamating; a mixture or alloy.
- (obsolete) The intermarriage and interbreeding of different ethnicities or races. [in the US, supplanted after 1863 by miscegenation; elsewhere, in use into the 1900s]
- 1855, Frederick Douglass, chapter VII, in My Bondage and My Freedom. […], New York, Auburn, N.Y.: Miller, Orton & Mulligan […], →OCLC:
- All the circumstances of William, on the great house farm, show him to have occupied a different position from the other slaves, and, certainly, there is nothing in the supposed hostility of slaveholders to amalgamation, to forbid the supposition that William Wilks was the son of Edward Lloyd.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
the process of amalgamating
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the result of amalgamating
the production of an alloy of mercury
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
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French
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin amalgamātiōnem.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a.mal.ɡa.ma.sjɔ̃/
- Homophone: amalgamations
Audio (file)
Further reading
- “amalgamation”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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