"Confluent" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Confluent refers to something that is flowing together or merging, often in a chaotic or turbulent manner. It can also describe something that is abundant or overflowing.
Confluent
Conflicts refer to oppositions, disagreements, or incompatibilities between people, groups, ideas, or interests that can lead to tension, arguments, or even violence. Conflicts can arise from various sources such as differences in values, goals, resources, or cultural backgrounds, and can manifest in different forms, including personal, social, economic, or political. In a broader sense, conflicts can also refer to internal contradictions or inconsistencies within oneself or within a system.
Confluences refers to the meeting or coming together of two or more rivers, streams, or other bodies of water, especially where they merge into a single river or estuary. The term can also be used more broadly to describe the meeting or convergence of different streams, ideas, or forces.
Conflux refers to a point or place where two or more things flow or come together, such as the conflux of two rivers, conflux of ideas, or conflux of cultures. It can also mean a mixture or fusion of different elements, such as the conflux of art and science.
Conformability refers to the tendency to conform or agree with other people, norms, or rules. It is the ability to adapt or comply with external influences, often in order to fit in, avoid social rejection, or maintain social harmony. Conformability can range from a subtle inclination to follow group norms to a more extreme willingness to blindly accept social pressure, potentially leading to a compromise of one's own values, beliefs, or opinions. In a broader sense, conformability can also apply to adapting to changing circumstances, adopting new habits or behaviors, or assimilating into a new culture or environment.
Conformal refers to a map or transformation that preserves angles and shapes, but not necessarily Magnitudes. In other words, it is a function that maps one set of geometric shapes or objects onto another while preserving the angles and shapes of the original figures. This is often used in mathematics and physics, particularly in the study of differential geometry and topology.