formation
The act of assembling a group or structure. [from 14th c.]
Noun
- The act of assembling a group or structure. [from 14th c.]
- Some cloud formation was confirmed and rainfall was observed over some islands. - 2019, VOA Learning English (public domain)
- Something possessing structure or form. [from 17th c.]
- The process during which something comes into being and gains its characteristics. [from 18th c.]
- A grouping of military units or smaller formations under a command, such as a brigade, division, wing, etc. [from 18th c.]
- A layer of rock of common origin. [from 19th c.]
- Over a broad region, the color of a formation may change. - 2012, Chinle Miller, In Mesozoic Lands: The Mesozoic Geology of Arches and Canyonlands National Parks, Kindle edition:
- An arrangement of moving troops, ships, or aircraft, such as a wedge, line abreast, or echelon. Often "in formation".
- An arrangement of players designed to facilitate certain plays.
- N'Golo Kanté embodies both sides of this, a player whose early scratchiness was soothed with glorious results in the new 3-4-3 formation, allowed simply to be his best, most wonderfully mobile, diligent, destructive...
- The process of influencing or guiding a person to a deeper understanding of a particular vocation.
- A structure made of two categories, two functors from the first to the second category, and a transformation from one of the functors to the other.
Origin
From Middle English formacioun, formation, borrowed from Old French formacion, from Latin fōrmātiō, from fōrmō (“form”, verb); see form as verb. Morphologically form + -ation.
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A formation back-formation back formation Christmas tree formation electroformation formational formation exposure time formation lap formation rule formation water free cell formation geoformation gust formation time I formation loan formation malformation microformation misformation missing man formation neoformation nonformation osteoformation pattern formation postformation