Cohesión in english
Cohesion
pronunciation: koʊhiʒən part of speech: noun
pronunciation: koʊhiʒən part of speech: noun
In gestures








cohesión = cohesion ; cohesiveness ; bind ; bonding.
Example: In the past much of this research has been uncoordinated and the research effort may have suffered from a lack of continuity and cohesion.Example: The degree of cohesiveness of the group and the attitudes of one person toward another are important factors in this process.Example: There is a strong bind between mother and offspring: newborns soon learn to cling to the mother's belly and, when older, to ride piggyback.Example: This group of electrons is, however, highly polarizable, which influences the bonding of the valence electrons.more:
» cohesión social = social cohesion .
Example: One measure of a community's social capital is its level of social cohesion or how well members of a community perceive themselves to be connected.» con mucha cohesión = tightly knit ; closely knit ; tight-knit ; close-knit .
Example: He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers. Example: A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern. Example: A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations. Example: In Britain, this meant the dislocation and scattering of what were close-knit communities either to sprawling suburban council estates, often grossly lacking in amenities, or to blocks of high-rise flats.» con poca cohesión = loose-knit ; loosely knit .
Example: After their breeding season is over, males and females separate, the billies (males) break up into small groups of 2-3 but females (nannies) and kids form loose-knit groups of up to 50. Example: This article describes the activities of the Bandwidth Conservation Society, a loosely knit group dedicated to speeding up the World Wide Web and saving valuable bandwidth.» fuerza de cohesión = bonding strength .
Example: From this we can assume that the bonding strength of this ion with monoxides and dioxides is the same in both the monomeric and dimeric complexes.» sin cohesión = scrappily ; scrappy [scrappier -comp., scrappiest -sup.] ; bitty [bittier -comp., bittiest -sup.] .
Example: This film adaptation is scrappily made and jumpy, and there is nothing here that evokes either the joy of the moment or the death of the soul. Example: It is a scrappy book, apparently assembled in haste. Example: However, his use of a remorselessly chronological approach yields a narrative that is often bitty, sometimes ponderously plodding.