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TOEFL BNC: 22175 COCA: 13507

confluence

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
confluence /ˈkɑːnˌfluːwəns/ noun
confluence
/ˈkɑːnˌfluːwəns/
noun
Learner's definition of CONFLUENCE
[singular]
technical : a place where two rivers or streams join to become one(河流或溪流的)汇流处,汇合处,交汇处
somewhat formal : a situation in which two things come together or happen at the same time(事物的)汇合,汇集usually + of
TOEFL BNC: 22175 COCA: 13507

confluence

noun

1
: a coming or flowing together, meeting, or gathering at one point
At the confluence of Native American, Hispanic, and Anglo cultures, Santa Fe is the symbolic heart of the Southwest. Jeffrey Steingarten
A hip urban confluence of tasting rooms, galleries, and surfboard designers, it's a place where wine, art and beach culture coalesce. Wine Enthusiast Magazine
Every once in a while in pop music there is a magical confluence: the right performers doing the right music with the right support. Ralph Novak
Italian influences have marked not only the style of architecture in Passau but also the way of life. Then, of course, Eastern Europe is next door. There are many confluences, it seems. N. Scott Momaday
2
a
: the flowing together of two or more streams
A complex lacework of waterways formed by the confluence of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers, the delta is the state's major water source … Robert B. Gunnison
Confluences are a basic building block of river networks on all scales. Chris Paola
b
: the place of meeting of two streams
… quaint Carbondale is set at the confluence of the Crystal and Roaring Fork Rivers. National Geographic
c
: the stream or body formed by the junction of two or more streams : a combined flood
… and eventually chose, disastrously, the only place in Assam where it was impossible for tea to thrive, being regularly drowned by the confluence of two huge rivers, a more suitable terrain for rice. Christian Lamb
3
or confluency , cell biology : the degree of substrate coverage that is exhibited by proliferating, adherent cells cultured in a laboratory vessel (such as a petri dish or flask)
At days 12-14, cell confluence reached 80%. Runguang Li et al.
The measurement of cell confluency is used to determine the growth phase of cells … Mee Foong et al.
also : complete coverage of a culture substrate by proliferating, adherent cells
When the cells reach confluence, they form aggregates and can be serially cultured. C. A. B. Jahoda et al.
Replicate dishes of pooled cells were grown to confluency and induced with Newcastle disease virus … Hermann Ragg and Charles Weissmann

Did you know?

The joining of rivers—as at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, where the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers flow together spectacularly—was the original meaning of confluence, and in its later meanings we still hear a strong echo of the physical merging of waters. So today we can speak of a confluence of events, a confluence of interests, a confluence of cultures, and so on, from which something important often emerges.

Example Sentences

the Mississippi River's confluence with the Missouri River a happy confluence of beautiful weather and spectacular scenery during our vacation
Recent Examples on the Web The illnesses — which were reported just hours after the Route fire ignited amid a punishing summer heat wave — mark a disturbing turning point in the 2022 fire season as a confluence of climate factors come to bear on California. Hayley Smith, Los Angeles Times, 2 Sep. 2022 For the past two decades, a confluence of factors has caused young Americans to give up on buying houses, a pattern also seen in the UK and some other European countries. WIRED, 27 Aug. 2022 Through a confluence of conceptual and technical advances, physicists argued that the information inside a black hole can actually be accessed from the Hawking radiation that leaves the black hole. Edgar Shaghoulian, Scientific American, 22 Aug. 2022 In the annals of popular music, has there ever been a more successful confluence of two existing solo brands than Robert Plant and Alison Krauss? Chris Willman, Variety, 20 Aug. 2022 Now, along with Germany, Italy, Spain, Greece, Poland, indeed most of the European Union, all are facing a toxic confluence of high temperatures, higher prices for energy and a Russian threat to cut off gas supplies. David A. Andelman, CNN, 31 July 2022 That confluence of circumstances might have been expected to inhibit England as the prospect of the final, of glory, hovered ever closer on the horizon. New York Times, 26 July 2022 Scientists warn that a confluence of factors could lead to more extreme weather on the Plains in the coming decades. Michael Holtz, The New Yorker, 22 July 2022 Gru marvels in his own esoteric accent) — are often the best thing on screen, a loopy confluence of Buster Keaton and Evel Knievel. Darren Franich, EW.com, 1 July 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

see confluent entry 1

First Known Use

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of confluence was in the 15th century
TOEFL BNC: 22175 COCA: 13507

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