How To Use Confluence In A Sentence

  • Arriving at the confluence with the Columbia, of the river whose banks they were following, they perceived that it was the same which had been called _Lewis river_, by the American captain of that name, in Narrative of a Voyage to the Northwest Coast of America in the years 1811, 1812, 1813, and 1814 or the First American Settlement on the Pacific
  • It tumbles through steep gorges and follows a course through affluent Cheshire towns and countryside before its confluence with the Mersey. Times, Sunday Times
  • Valleys and sweet plains, waterfalls and rivers, glades where lovers would have walked and confluences where towns could have been built, the lovely island had all these accouter-ments, these alluring invitations to civilization. Hawaii
  • Her secret, it seems, has been a confluence of business savvy and a folksy but formidable disarming charm. Times, Sunday Times
  • This confluence happens 100 yards behind Bath railway station, and matches the city's nicety of line.
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  • Alternatively, you could hire a bike and follow the course of the River Loir from Vendome to its confluence with the Sarthe.
  • A hanging bridge has been planned at ‘Triveni sangamam’, the confluence of three rivers in Muvattupuzha.
  • These confluence levels allowed traders to see where a stock, future, commodity, or currency had the greatest probability of pausing or reversing on intraday charts.
  • It has gone from an ecstatic confluence of societal change and economic opportunity to a fusty business institution.
  • Classical art has its own temptations and sins; as Maritain hints, it may obscure the originating sense of congruence or confluence, the 'pulsion' which stimulates formal composition, by over-insistence on an abstract rigour of structure. Clark Lectures, Trinity College, Cambridge Grace, Necessity and Imagination: Catholic Philosophy and the Twentieth Century Artist Lecture 4: God and the Artist
  • The confluence of these changes has engendered much planning and implementation activity within the financial industry.
  • Machine translation is at the confluence of linguistics and computer science.
  • I watched cabin cruisers arc through the large triangular confluence, then, my detour done, wandered back for the walk proper.
  • The Degree Confluence Project is an interesting initiative to take an organized sampling of the world by visiting and photographing each point of Earth’s surface where latitude and longitude intersect in integer degrees. Reflective Surface - Archives: 2003 April
  • Trigger Schafer, who had begun his career as an enlisted metalsmith working on CH-46s, bunked during the workweek in a 40-foot boat he docked at Solomons Island, a waterfront village at the confluence of the Patuxent River and Chesapeake Bay. The Dream Machine
  • The confluence of Western trends and old values is brought out at every turn.
  • Confluentia," whose threads of liquidity are eruditely, yet romantically, intertangled to represent the confluence of the Rhine and the Moselle; and "The Headless Horseman," a masterpiece of burlesque weirdness, representing the wild pursuit of Ichabod Crane and the final hurling of the awful head, -- a pumpkin, some say. Contemporary American Composers Being a Study of the Music of This Country, Its Present Conditions and Its Future, with Critical Estimates and Biographies of the Principal Living Composers; and an Abundance of Portraits, Fac-simile Musical Autographs, and
  • Located on a low hill above the confluence of the Naddle beck and the river Greta surrounded by high mountains.
  • Ommatius sp., robber fly, by Pete Moulton — with a leafhopper for breakfast, confluence of Rio Verde and Rio Salado north of Mesa, Arizona. Photography Contest: Finalists, Threatened or Endangered - The Panda's Thumb
  • Great teams are a confluence of many factors and by and large are an aberration, rather than the results of a predictable system. Times, Sunday Times
  • The JAP project inserted itself, uncalled, into the turbulent confluence between natural law and state regulation, and signaled its allegiance to the former.
  • Demand reduction and optimization of the sustainment footprint is the result of the confluence of the other three concepts.
  • Cells were passaged to 50% confluence 24 h before transfection.
  • The confluence of haiku and jazz in his poems is based on the expression of natural, spontaneous responses to human life.
  • It was an enactment of a rhetorical confluence and epistemological crossfertilization between science and art.
  • The light is dependent upon the confluence of sunrise, wind, cloud and quality of air, and these ingredients do not lend themselves to a formulaic recipe.
  • The 160-metre falls mark the dramatic confluence of the rivers Nera and Velino.
  • They are strategically positioned on mountainsides, on the confluence of two rivers or overlooking valley entrances.
  • It sits on the border with Austria at the confluence of two rivers.
  • Ommatius sp., robber fly, by Pete Moulton — with a leafhopper for breakfast, confluence of Rio Verde and Rio Salado north of Mesa, Arizona. Photography Contest: Finalists, Threatened or Endangered - The Panda's Thumb
  • That all came to an end in recent months after a confluence of events sideswiped the industry, causing short sellers to swell. Rare-Earth Firms Prove a Common Focus for Shorts
  • It tumbles through steep gorges and follows a course through affluent Cheshire towns and countryside before its confluence with the Mersey. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the confluence of agrarian and suburban landscapes, the building's encompassment of so many forces and imagery without is a productive strategy.
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • This seemingly random confluence of contrasting fabrics subverts the tie's traditional role.
  • The two men drank in silence, each immersed in the ritual, savoring the confluence of two extreme tastes in their mouths. FLOATING CITY
  • That, as it turned out, was a fortunate confluence of events, of which more anon.
  • According to the publication the waterfall lies on the confluence of the East Lumwana and Mumbezhi rivers.
  • The confluence of the convention, various interest groups and the debut of the hard-wired interconnect in Philadelphia has led to an unexpected amount of political advertising for Comcast over the past few months.
  • We then left the mouth of the southeast fork, to which in honour of the secretary of the treasury we called Gallatin's river, and at the distance of half a mile reached the confluence of the southwest and middle branch of the History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, Vol. I. To the Sources of the Missouri, Thence Across the Rocky Mountains and Down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean. Performed During the Years 1804-5-6.
  • No imported fuel dependency, no silly "noddy car" image issues, plus there's the added advantage of that British/German confluence, which, ahem, has worked so well for the royals in the past… Wedding Gifts Unlimited
  • There was a confluence of rivers. Times, Sunday Times
  • He established his weather control scheme in the land surrounding the confluence of two rivers.
  • The confluence in Browne's prefatory remarks of the topics of antiquarianism and medicine, and the rhetorical antitheses old-new and arising-burial is predictable in antiquarian discourse, where the gifted amateur reigned supreme.
  • The 160-metre falls mark the dramatic confluence of the rivers Nera and Velino.
  • What, then, are you and I but sentient units in one great evolving process of life-activity and thought; and yet so circumvolved in that process that the impulse, which we irradiate from the point of our single particular seat of energy and feeling, thrills through the vast spheres of human purpose and endeavor, and raises the standard of truth or forwards the advance of enlightened order like each rhythmic melody is gathered in the mightier confluence of chime and strain to swell the torrent of a mighty symphony. Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence The Best Speeches Delivered by the Negro from the days of Slavery to the Present Time
  • The large, stone main building sits on a bluff above the confluence of two rivers.
  • The actual point of confluence of these two rivers, the Chobe and the Leeambye, is ill defined, on account of each dividing into several branches as they inosculate; but when the whole body of water collects into one bed, it is a goodly sight for one who has spent many years in the thirsty south. Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa
  • This crosses the Calder close to its confluence with the River Ribble.
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • Sited at the confluence of the Saone and Rhone rivers in Lyons, the futuristic megastructure is conceived as a hybridisation of museum and urban leisure space.
  • We seem to be faced with an uneasy confluence of two issues. Times, Sunday Times
  • A hanging bridge has been planned at ‘Triveni sangamam’, the confluence of three rivers in Muvattupuzha.
  • But the bigger reason behind this bundle of contradictions is a confluence of technological shifts.
  • The town is sacred because it is at the confluence of two real rivers - the Ganges and the Yamun - and one mythical one, the Saraswati.
  • It would be stupid to ignore the extent to which the industry's confluence of interests with the most reactionary forces corrupts the products of even its most noble-minded artists.
  • The confluence of atypical price spikes, enormous and unrelenting equity extraction, huge churning, and risky late-cycle borrowing terms assure the coming proliferation of underwater homeowners.
  • I know that this politics as religion isn’t anything new, Jonah Goldberg’s Liberal Fascism gives clear examples dating back at least to the 1930s, but I feel that some confluence of the internet, current events, and President Bush really spread the faith among the left (and I’m sure there are politically religious conservatives as well, but where I see the pervasiveness is the left). Happy New Year! « Tai-Chi Policy
  • In the confluence of dim hopes and passions which rise above the harmonies like smoke-wreaths riding the red flame, the soul glows interfluous with other souls and is elated with the inspiration of their presence. Apologia Diffidentis
  • The pair had only been dating for a few months when, according to the band's website, a shaman performed the ceremony in a canoe at the confluence of three rivers in the Amazon.
  • There can be no doubt of the existence of a culture whose roots were formed by the confluence of folk Portuguese and African traditions.
  • What makes for a powerful image - much like Asia itself - is the confluence of all these elements within the rude stream of life.
  • So you're typing, and by some magic confluence of events you're not making any mistakes, so autocorrect is working perfectly. Samsung Galaxy S II and HTC Incredible S smartphones – review
  • The confluence of these two trends has slowly drained the game of its most important element: terror.
  • Such an impression of homogeneity would seem to result from the confluence of two discrete but interrelated trends.
  • It has gone from an ecstatic confluence of societal change and economic opportunity to a fusty business institution.
  • They set up their humble shanties at the confluence of the Lumpur and Klang rivers (In fact, Kuala Lumpur means a ‘muddy confluence’ in Malay).
  • Those fine words a product of the confluence of cultures, building upon so much carnage, so much misunderstanding, so much senseless waste.
  • a confluence of artistry, superb choreography, and stage design.
  • All cells were passaged at subconfluence and maintained in a 5% CO2 environment.
  • The boatramp is situated on the Fraser fairly close to the confluence of the Harrison river, and it was on the lower Harrison that we dropped anchor.
  • Today, there is a confluence of developments that is more than subtle.
  • The loud light, and the views to the confluence of several estuaries and to several headlands and beyond them the sea are transfixing.
  • So, in other words, another international confluence of hot wind and gassy rhetoric thus comes to pass.
  • Pittsburgh is located at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers
  • The confluence of the two rivers also stands as a natural boundary separating three countries Mozambique, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
  • Flooding was extensive, especially in the Stockbridge area, with the River Worth bursting its banks and overflowing near its confluence with the Aire.
  • He was on one large North Canterbury sheep station in a swampy area at the confluence of the Pahau and Hurunui Rivers.
  • _Confluentes_, which means the _confluence_; and this name, in the course of ages, has gradually become changed to Coblenz. Rollo on the Rhine
  • By around 5,000 BC a focus had developed at the confluence of the Nene and a small tributary, where people stopped to light fires, knap flint, and perform domestic tasks.
  • The reasons for this are varied but they boil down to an essential confluence of two factors: it matters and it's uncertain. Christianity Today
  • The confluences of the venous sinuses of the dura mater are variable.
  • But the their problem is that through an unlucky confluence of events, a group of crazies have taken over, people who do not act, in general, in line with the beliefs of those who voted for them.
  • Today the adit can still be seen at the confluence of the Uncompahgre River and Canyon Creek, at the base of Oak Street on the southwest side of Ouray.
  • Along from Waiotahe is the confluence of two rivers, the Waioweka and Otara.
  • Great teams are a confluence of many factors and by and large are an aberration, rather than the results of a predictable system. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is also a fact that the sense of crisis that emerged in this historical confluence would be a theme that Heidegger the philosopher would retain his entire career.
  • The travellers bound to that bourne embark here on steamers that go down the Volga as far as its confluence with the Kama, a tributary stream, and thence ascend the Kama, which is navigable all the way to Perm. Russia As Seen and Described by Famous Writers
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • More important, perhaps, was the confluence of stimuli which activated the revolt of Sir Oswald Mosley against the political establishment.
  • From the citadel the impregnability of Ani's site is even more striking: on a peninsula at the confluence of two rivers, only one side of the city was accessible by land.
  • In the second half of the album, "Bcuz" is a brilliant confluence of zany pointillist melodies, swelling choruses and clever brass licks. Daniel J. Kushner: Audio Outliers: Rediscovering Recent Gems in Experimental Music
  • There is a strange confluence in smoking between social acceptability and the physiological addictiveness of the nicotine itself.
  • I never heard the term indigo child until I read this article, but there it was in the New York Times on Thursday, and then last night at the video store I saw this--clearly some kind of confluence, at least for me. I Read The New Yorker This Week 1
  • From its confluence with the Okinagan the river pursues a southerly course for a hundred and fifty miles, most of the way through Steep Trails
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • Linework follows the presence of várzea habitats along these rivers according to IBGE and the eastern delineation is the confluence of the Japurá with the Solimões Rivers. Solimões-Japurá moist forest
  • It explains the confluence of factors that made this corner of the West Midlands a place in which the modern world was forged. Times, Sunday Times
  • One can see from the viewpoint or ‘lovers meet’ the confluence of the rivers Teesta and the Rangeet.
  • In this paper, the symbolic measure is introduced, and semiregularity is defined, and the confluence of semiregular term rewriting system is proved.
  • Metaphorically, this has made it possible for musicians to re-route pilgrimages to Santiago along the Celtic fringe to form postmodern confluences of Celtic religion and music.
  • This small town lies at the confluence of two rivers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Roman remains have been located at the confluence of the rivers Thames and Fleet.
  • The Sangameshwar temple is at the confluence of rivers Alaknanda, Varuna and Shastri and gets submerged during monsoon.
  • The confluence of domestic pessimism and overseas optimism has, then, temporarily eliminated the A-to-H-share premium.
  • The sixteenth century was a high point for epigraphic forgery because of the confluence of two historical trends. The Times Literary Supplement
  • Yes, the confluence of the culinary and cocktail worlds has been happening for some time now, evidenced by the vogue of homemade tinctures and bitters and bourbon washed in bacon fat, but no place has done it with such audaciousness and culinary precision. Raising the Bar
  • We spent forty-two and a half hours, paddling at the rate of five miles an hour, in coming from Linyanti to the confluence; there we found a dike of amygdaloid lying across the Leeambye. Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa
  • Iraq and Egypt formed the confluence of ancient cultures with age-old traditions of their own.
  • The confluence of events was an ominous portent for Newman.
  • They make a similarly ironic point about the confluence of minimalist forms of art and the larger imperatives of social and economic power.
  • Music Maestros of India and Iran today presented unique confluence of musical traditions oftwo ancient Civilizations of globe, and enthralls the audience with their soul hearting performance held here at Sher-e-Kashmir International Conference Centre on the banks of world famous Dal Lake, this evening. Kashmir remained a centre of Sufiism & the tradition is still alive: Karan Singh
  • Situated as it was at the confluence of two rivers, and yet deep inland, it was secure and at the same time easily accessible to traders.
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, the Susquehanna for smallmouths (although I typically wade upstream near the confluence of the Susquehanna and Juniata). The Finest Summer Fishing?
  • More striking, however, than Shardlow is Stourport, at the confluence of the Stour with the Severn.
  • In Moscow there is strange confluence of physical and poetical landscapes.
  • It contains the confluence of the Columbia and Willamette Rivers and is composed of deltaic sands and gravels deposited by Pleistocene floods. Ecoregions of Oregon (EPA)
  • The current shortage is the result of a confluence of three major factors.
  • So the confluence of these two trends is definitely going to result in medical device companies spending more money against the consumer.
  • The trek through the exhibition provided surprising confluences between artists from diverse traditions.
  • About a day's walk upstream from the confluence of the Shields and Yellowstone rivers, a sandstone bluff looms above the willow bottomland.
  • The result perhaps was not a ‘carnival’ as much as a confluence of cultural conflicts played against an artistic practice of exiles and cosmopolitans.
  • These cells had been passaged through 14 passages and were grown to confluence in 35 mm culture dishes.
  • You know, motors were invented for a reason," called out a smirking motorboater near the confluence of the Missouri and Gasconade rivers. Columbiatribune.com stories
  • We now reach the confluence of the Nkonio or north-eastern, with the Mbokwe, or eastern branch, which anastomose to form the Gaboon; the latter, being apparently the larger of the two, preserves the title Mpolo. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
  • It was, indeed, a confluence of active minds from various schools in Madurai district.
  • But few who suffer sudden cardiac arrest will have such a lucky confluence of circumstances. Times, Sunday Times
  • Gladwell says the best succeed because of hard work, innate talent and a confluence of circumstances that some call accumulative advantage, and some call luck. Undefined
  • The seeds of the confluence of universal human rights and global communications were planted during World War II.
  • Indeed, you can never really be 100% sure that even the most audacious results you have seen with your own eyes were not perhaps a strange confluence of self-hypnosis, auto-suggestion or coincidence.
  • The elusive nature of high-grade 1918-S Buffalo nickels is the product of a confluence of factors. An Underrated Buffalo: The 1918-S : Coin Collecting News
  • At the confluence you are likely to be welcomed by a variety of widowbirds, bishops and waxbills, including White-winged, Long-tailed and Jackson's Widowbirds and Yellow and Yellow-crowned Bishops.
  • ‘Waitanyuan’ means literally ‘the headstream of the Bund’ and is centred at the confluence of Suzhou Creek and the Huangpu River.
  • A condition wherein he may be overwhelmed with sad apprehensions of the coming of a confluence of all manner of evils upon him, — and that not for a short season, but he may be necessitated to walk in them, which denotes a state of some continuance, a conflicting with most dismal evils, and in their own nature tending to death, — is in the supposal. The Doctrine of the Saints��� Perseverance Explained and Confirmed
  • The confluence of the rivers Ouse and Fosse was a naturally attractive site to the military mind.
  • Over the years, each of these artists has exhibited separately, showing works that deal in varying ways with the confluence of biology, technology and art.
  • Priority was also given to completing sheet piling along a 1,000 yard stretch of the Dutch River, upstream of its confluence with the River Ouse at Goole.
  • It now boasts of a fountain park, a rare spot of colour on a rather confusing confluence of roads.
  • They baptize a proselyte in such a confluence of waters as was fit for the washing of a menstruous woman. From the Talmud and Hebraica
  • The confluence of the convention, various interest groups and the debut of the hard-wired interconnect in Philadelphia has led to an unexpected amount of political advertising for Comcast over the past few months.
  • The confluence of invisibility, indeterminacy, and contagion understandably generates anxiety and encourages behaviour that reduces risk of exposure.
  • Michoacán is a confluence of landscapes, rivers and lakes, a variety of climates, cascades hidden in abundantly exuberant vegetation, virgin beaches with crystalline waters, tempestuous waves and calm cooling waters, therapeutic spring waters, geysers, caves and subterranean rivers. Introduction to Michoacán - the soul of Mexico
  • The majority of those paths, along with main roads to the town, were closed by the swollen river confluence yesterday. Times, Sunday Times

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