From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishheterogeneoushet‧e‧ro‧ge‧ne‧ous /ˌhetərəʊˈdʒiːniəs $ -roʊ-/ (also heterogenous /ˌhetəˈrɒdʒənəs◂ $ -ˈrɑː-/) adjective formal DIFFERENTconsisting of parts or members that are very different from each other OPP homogeneous a heterogeneous collection of buildings —heterogeneously adverb —heterogeneity /ˌhetərəʊdʒəˈniːəti $ -roʊ-/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
heterogeneous• We have already made the point that most political cultures are heterogeneous.• Both antibodies are a largely heterogeneous family.• In the first stage, we primarily dealt with homogeneous networks, then moved to inter-networks that are heterogeneous in nature.• Young next to old, doing-well next to down-and-out: a heterogeneous mass present for its own mutually exclusive reasons.• The U.S. has a very heterogeneous population.• Services is simply too heterogeneous to be an interesting category.Origin heterogeneous (1600-1700) Medieval Latin heterogeneus, from Greek, from hetero- ( → HETERO-) + genos “type”