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Look up: assemblage

  1. Assemblage
    Refers to the total number of minerals included in a metamorphic rock
    Found on http://www.quartznall.co.uk/glossery.htm

  2. assemblage
    In the visual arts, any three-dimensional work of art constructed of various, and often unusual, materials, or found objects. The term was first used in the 1950s by French painter Jean
    Found on
    http://www.tate.org.uk/collections/gloss

  3. Assemblage
    An integrated group of species inhabiting a given area; the organisms within a community influence one another's distribution, abundance, and evolution. (A Human Community is a social group of any size whose members reside in a specific locality.)
    Found on http://sea.unep-wcmc.org/reception/gloss

  4. Assemblage
    As·sem'blage noun [ Confer French assemblage . See Assemble .] 1. The act of assembling, or the state of being assembled; association. « In sweet assemblage every blooming grace. Fenton. » 2. A collection of individuals, or of individuals, or of particular things; as, a political assemblage ; an assemblage of ideas. Syn.< ...
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/A/132

  5. Assemblage
    `Assemblage` is a term with uses in several fields: * Assemblage (art) * A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity (philosophy) * Assemblage (archaeology) * Fossil assemblage * Assemblage 23, a futurepop/EBM group `Assemblage` is also the name of an architectural journal (now defunct): * `Assemblage` (journal)
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assemblage

  6. Assemblage
    • (n.) The act of assembling, or the state of being assembled; association. • (n.) A collection of individuals, or of individuals, or of particular things; as, a political assemblage; an assemblage of ideas.
    Found on http://thinkexist.com/dictionary/meaning

  7. assemblage
    in art, work produced by the incorporation of everyday objects into the composition. Although each non-art object, such as a piece of rope or ... [7 related articles]
    Found on http://www.britannica.com/eb/a-z/a/114

  8. assemblage
    assemblage 1. An assembling or being assembled. 2. Any gathering of people or things; a collection; an assembly. 3. A fitting together, as parts of a machine. 4. A work of art created by assembling materials and objects; also, the technique of making such works.
    Found on http://www.wordinfo.info/words/index/inf

  9. Assemblage
    A group of artifacts which represent a culture. A group of artifacts related to each other based upon some recovery from a common archaeological context. Assemblage examples are artifacts from a site or feature.
    Found on http://members.aol.com/artgumbus/glossar

  10. Assemblage
    a set of organisms whose pattern of organization (with respect to competition, predation, mutualism, etc.) is unknown (Giller and Gee 1980:537) (cf Community).
    Found on http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/liter


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23 November 2009

This day in history:
At sixteen minutes past five on 23rd November 1963, a British television institution was born. Doctor Who would go on to become the longest-running science-fiction programme in the world, eventually spawning twenty six seasons of adventures from 1963 to 1989. In total, eight actors have played the part of Gallifrey's most famous Time Lord. From the very first - William Hartnell in 1963 - to the very last - Paul McGann, in the 1996 TV Movie - the Doctor has wandered through time and space in his trusty time machine, an old type-40 TARDIS (Time and Relative Dimensions in Space). Although appearing to be nothing more than a battered blue police box, it is in fact vastly bigger on the inside than on the outside, and always departs with its familiar wheezing, groaning sound. read more

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