cohesión
cohesion ; cohesiveness ; bind.
In the past much of this research has been uncoordinated and the research effort may have suffered from a lack of continuity and cohesion.
The degree of cohesiveness of the group and the attitudes of one person toward another are important factors in this process.
There is a strong bind between mother and offspring: newborns soon learn to cling to the mother's belly and, when older, to ride piggyback.
cohesión social
social cohesion
One measure of a community's social capital is its level of social cohesion or how well members of a community perceive themselves to be connected.
con mucha cohesión
tightly knit
closely knit
tight-knit
He recorded with great vividness the literary life of London at that time, describing the wit, anxieties and insights of a tightly knit and highly gifted group of writers.
A sample of statistics measuring circulation, reference and in-library use was collected from 76 libraries and tested for redundancy, correlation and variation in a closely knit pattern.
A well-organised rural parish council can provide a far more tight-knit forum for debate and 'getting things done' than urban residents' associations.
fuerza de cohesión
bonding strength
From this we can assume that the bonding strength of this ion with monoxides and dioxides is the same in both the monomeric and dimeric complexes.
sin cohesión
scrappily
scrappy [scrappier -comp., scrappiest -sup.]
bitty [bittier -comp., bittiest -sup.]
This film adaptation is scrappily made and jumpy, and there is nothing here that evokes either the joy of the moment or the death of the soul.
It is a scrappy book, apparently assembled in haste.
However, his use of a remorselessly chronological approach yields a narrative that is often bitty, sometimes ponderously plodding.