From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhomogeneousho‧mo‧ge‧ne‧ous /ˌhəʊməˈdʒiːniəs◂ $ ˌhoʊ-/ ●○○ (also homogenous /həˈmɒdʒɪnəs $ -ˈmɑː-/) adjective SAMEconsisting of people or things that are all of the same type → heterogeneous a homogeneous society —homogeneously adverb
Examples from the Corpus
homogeneous• Computers check whether each text is stylistically homogeneous.• In classifying the aim is to sort objects by their selected properties into homogeneous categories.• an ethnically homogeneous country• The demand for sport is not a homogeneous demand.• Women are not a homogeneous group.• These plasma cells produce a homogeneous immunoglobulin protein which stains as a well-defined peak in the gamma region.• The world comes to appear homogeneous, isotropic, decentered.• Even such popular futurists as Alvin and Heidi Toffler generally subsume women into a homogeneous, unisex future.• Variables with normal distribution and homogeneous variance were compared by means of parametric tests, otherwise their non-parametric counterparts were used.Origin homogeneous (1600-1700) Medieval Latin homogeneus, from Greek, from homos ( → HOMO-) + genos “type”