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Showing results for homogeneous. Search instead for homogeneres.
Definitions

homogeneous

[hoh-muh-jee-nee-uhs, -jeen-yuhs, hom-uh-] / ˌhoʊ məˈdʒi ni əs, -ˈdʒin yəs, ˌhɒm ə- /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Compared with India, Japan and China are much more linguistically homogeneous.

From The Wall Street Journal • Dec. 3, 2025

If Spain in the 1930s may look racially homogeneous from our supposedly enlightened point of view, Kaufman indirectly makes the point that such definitions are always subjective, and subject to historical revision.

From Salon • Nov. 16, 2025

His dimensional approach aligns with how clinicians actually evaluate patients, globally, providing richer individual descriptions while enabling formation of more homogeneous research cohorts.

From Science Daily • Oct. 14, 2025

Still, the neurotypical viewer might wonder how accurately the series portrays neurodivergence, and indeed, within the community, which is nothing like homogeneous, one finds a multiplicity of views.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 13, 2025

On a group level, though, they were less genetically homogeneous, which conferred some relative advantage; the virus would sweep through them, but not kill quite so many.

From "1491" by Charles C. Mann