homogeneous - use in sentences

Preposition: with

  • respect: Traditionally, the solution to the problem assumes the presence of training data that is homogeneous with respect to the test data.

Used with adjective complement

  • become: Throughout the twentieth century, the titled nobility of the United Kingdom became less homogeneous.
  • consider: In addition, changes in measurement technologies and data processing procedures imply that few hydrometric time series can be considered truly homogeneous.
  • make: In some cases the specification may necessitate selection of components of the sample whereas in others it must be made sufficiently homogeneous.
  • assume: Current design methods assume steady homogeneous, full-bore flow and cannot predict these interacting unsteady regimes.
  • appear: There seemd to be contamination of some of the plots in the doubled haploid trial, as they did not appear homogeneous.

Modifies a noun

  • catalysis: The School of Chemistry at St Andrews has about 20 people doing research in homogeneous catalysis, collaborating with a variety of industries.
  • nucleation: Furthermore, the relatively large undercooling ( 25 o C ) required to crystallize the majority of the lamellae suggests homogeneous nucleation.
  • catalyst: This compound is an active homogeneous epoxidation catalyst in its own right.
  • ignition: The first covers the application of homogeneous charge compression ignition ( HCCI ) to the patented Dual-FuelTM system.
  • manifold: The notion of a radial function on the sphere is generalized to that of a spherical kernel on a compact homogeneous manifold.
  • equation: They are all examples of homogeneous, linear partial differential equations.

Modifying Another Word

  • ethnically: Nowhere is this truer than in the small, egalitarian, formerly ethnically homogeneous states of Sweden and Denmark.
  • spatially: The idea is to make scale more closely match the size of spatially homogeneous areas in each settlement.
  • culturally: Contemporary reality requires citizenship not to be restricted to groups which claim to be ethnically and culturally homogeneous.
  • relatively: A relatively homogeneous culture united the Bronze Age elite through much of China around the 14th century BC.
  • fairly: Scotland, Wales and Ireland are fairly homogeneous nations, each with its own clearly defined character.. .
  • strictly: Thus, the photometric data in this table are not strictly homogeneous, and should be considered to be approximate values only.

Preposition: in

  • term: A new set of incident classes was devised, which were more homogeneous in terms of the number of lanes closed during an incident.
  • composition: Nobody seems to have noted that the rural population was neither homogeneous in composition nor uniform in its demands.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.