confluence \KON-floo-uhn(t)s\ [Word of the Day]

159916.jpgConfluence of my many brain cells is causing me to stress too much. Never one to use the daily “word of the day” calendar, I was happy to see it as a plug-in for my Personalized Google Homepage (note, it’s not my.google.com, why I’ll never know). But it’s great, I can see it as a true confluence of all the information I need at my fingertips.

confluence \KON-floo-uhn(t)s\, noun:

1. A flowing or coming together; junction.
2. The place where two rivers, streams, etc. meet.
3. A flocking or assemblage of a multitude in one place; a large collection or assemblage.

At the confluence of continents, at the narrow neck of the Nile Valley just before it spreads into the flat water-maze of the Delta, this has always been a place where elements mingle and cultures collide.
— Max Rodenbeck, Cairo: The City Victorious

It’s the combination of these various factors, then — their historical confluence, if you will — that must be held responsible for the rapid erosion of the church’s authority over sexual matters since the Second Vatican Council.
— Michael W. Cuneo, The Smoke of Satan

A remarkable confluence of technological and economic forces is enabling women to join the paid labor force around the world.
— Helen E. Fisher, The First Sex

At the time, I did not appreciate what an unusually fortunate confluence of circumstances was reigning in the cinematic heavens; I thought it would go on forever with the same incandescence.
– Phillip Lopate, Totally, Tenderly, Tragically

Outside, about a mile below, the Monongahela River met the Allegheny and the Ohio, forming the confluence of waters upon which stood Pittsburgh.
— Stanley Bing, Lloyd: What Happened

But it is not New-York streets built by the confluence of workmen and wealth of all nations, though stretching out toward Philadelphia until they touch it, and northward until they touch New Haven, Hartford, Springfield, Worcester, and Boston, — not these that make the real estimation.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson, “American Civilization,” The Atlantic, April 1862

Confluence is from Latin confluens, “flowing together,” from confluere, “to flow together,” from con-, “with, together” fluere, “to flow.”

Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for confluence

[SOURCE: Dictionary.com/Word of the Day Archive/confluence ]
Confluence was the Word of the Day for Monday March 27, 2006

About Lonny Paul

I'm just a simple guy with too much extra time in front of a keyboard and screen. There, I fill my time with a myriad of things in addition to watching the entire internet, like blogging, taking photos, creating composite and panoramic images - or doing nothing but watching a bunch of video. Check out my Profile on Google +..
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