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The place where two or more things come together
Answer for the clue "The place where two or more things come together ", 8 letters:
junction
Alternative clues for the word junction
Word definitions for junction in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1711, "act of joining," from Latin iunctionem (nominative iunctio ), noun of action from past participle stem of iungere "to join together" (see jugular ). Meaning "place where things meet" first attested 1836, American English, originally in reference ...
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 139 Housing Units (2000): 75 Land area (2000): 0.887141 sq. miles (2.297684 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.887141 sq. miles (2.297684 sq. km) FIPS code: 38778 Located within: Illinois ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Junction \Junc"tion\, n. [L. junctio, fr. jungere, junctum, to join: cf. F. jonction. See Join .] The act of joining, or the state of being joined; union; combination; coalition; as, the junction of two armies or detachments; the junction of paths. The ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
is a puzzle video game developed by Micronet and published by Konami in 1990 that saw a western release. Using a variety of sliding puzzles , the player rolls a ball (possibly containing a small armadillo character as implied by the game's introduction) ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. the place where two or more things come together the state of being joined together [syn: conjunction , conjugation , colligation ] the shape or manner in which things come together and a connection is made [syn: articulation , join , joint , juncture ...
Usage examples of junction.
In the meantime we may follow the unhappy fortunes of the small column which had, as already described, been sent out by Sir George White in order, if possible, to prevent the junction of the two Boer armies, and at the same time to threaten the right wing of the main force, which was advancing from the direction of Dundee, Sir George White throughout the campaign consistently displayed one quality which is a charming one in an individual, but may be dangerous in a commander.
Beginning on the 17th with an attack on a ten-mile front between Tracy-le-Val and Vingre he had steadily pushed on until by the 23rd his left flank held the Oise as far as its junction with the Ailette and his front faced the latter canalized river as far as Guny.
This junction produced a complicated pattern of lobes and saddles that is frequently seen in the ammonite fossils found today in Cretaceous marine deposits.
In all probability there was, according to the usual plan of Norman churches, a tower at the junction of the nave and transepts, and beyond this an apsidal choir.
At the hubs and junctions of the irrigation system, Auger made out the off-white sprawl of cities and townships, the tentative scratches of roads and the lines of tethered dirigibles.
If either of these alternative definitions is adopted as the definition of junction, the other definition appears as an axiom respecting the character of junction as we know it in nature.
The axon of a neuron may make a junction not only with another neuron but also with some organ to which it carries its impulse, usually a muscle.
De Wet himself escaped and attempted a junction with Beyers who had fled south from the Transvaal.
He laughed, and I remembered how the sound of his laughter had boomed in that wet, snowy drive from Whitehorse across to Haines Junction, how his teeth had shown white against the black of the forest streaming by.
Ganil under his breath when Caid slowed at a junction of identical corridors on the next floor.
He passed through the whole Chaco, descending the Pilcomayo to its junction with the Paraguay, through territories but little explored even to-day.
Now and then my touch would reveal a doorless intersecting passage, and I several times encountered junctions with two, three, and four diverging avenues.
Her body, with its angular contours, its unexpected junctions of mucous membrane and hairline, detrusor muscle and erectile tissue, was a ripening anthology of perverse possibilities.
McAdams Junction isolates the erratum and writes in to the papers about it.
After exhorting the Moslems to confide in the aid of God and his apostle, Abubeker resolved, by a vigorous attack, to prevent the junction of the rebels.