English language

How to pronounce macrocosm in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms cosmos, creation, existence, universe, world
Type of natural object
Has types natural order, nature, closed universe
Derivation macrocosmic

Examples of macrocosm

macrocosm
This is however more often used in the sense of the microcosm and the macrocosm.
From the en.wikipedia.org
We find similar evidence of this microcosmic phenomenon in the macrocosm as well.
From the theepochtimes.com
What China has become in the past 30 years or so is Fenfang's village in macrocosm.
From the washingtonpost.com
Paramatman is situated at the core of every individual jiva in the macrocosm.
From the en.wikipedia.org
In evocation, the magician, having become the macrocosm, creates a microcosm.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Intercut with the microcosm of Jack's life is the super-duper macrocosm of the creation of the universe.
From the stltoday.com
His article uses the microcosm of a single play to unlock the secrets to the macrocosm of baseball.
From the forbes.com
So with this in mind, how can we apply the microcosm of a single baseball play to the macrocosm of success?
From the forbes.com
It is in art, and its correlative, love, that microcosm meets macrocosm, the human meets the spiritual.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • Universe: everything that exists anywhere; "they study the evolution of the universe"; "the biggest tree in existence"
  • (macrocosmic) relating to or constituting a macrocosm
  • Macrocosm and microcosm is an ancient Greek Neo-Platonic schema of seeing the same patterns reproduced in all levels of the cosmos, from the largest scale (macrocosm or universe-level) all the way down to the smallest scale (microcosm or sub-sub-atomic or even metaphysical-level). ...
  • A complex structure, such as a society, considered as a single entity that contains numerous similar, smaller-scale structures; The universe
  • The great universe, literally; or God manifesting through His body, the solar system.
  • (Cf. microcosm): The natural universe as a whole, including the biological realms of flora and fauna, weather, and celestial objects such as the sun, moon, and stars. See discussion under chain of being.
  • (Greek, "great world.") The larger cosmos; the entire warp and woof of creation. Also used to contrast man as the microcosm ("little world") against the backdrop of the larger world in which he lives. See also Microcosm.
  • The greater world or universe.
  • The world around us.