amalgamate

IPA: ʌmˈæɫgʌmeɪt

verb

  • (transitive or intransitive) To merge, to combine, to blend, to join.
  • To make an alloy of a metal and mercury.
  • (transitive, mathematics) To combine (free groups) by identifying respective isomorphic subgroups.

adjective

  • Coalesced; united; combined.
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Examples of "amalgamate" in Sentences

  • Analysts are recommending the companies shut more of their facilities, or even amalgamate.
  • They amalgamate seamlessly into any modern living room and add multitude of warmth, charm and seductive beauty to the room.
  • When the word "amalgamate" escaped his lips a storm of hisses and jeers drowned further speech and he quickly crouched down in his seat.
  • Drawn to the particulars, we try to amalgamate them into an illusionistic head, then get seduced by details again, unable to reconcile the two readings.
  • My bet is that they're going to skip or amalgamate a few books, or go the Dexter route and splinter off into a drastically different canon the most logical choice.
  • With the last sentence in her article, it seemed as if in the effort to amalgamate all Muslims into one mass, Ayaan Hirsi Ali established that the only "intolerant" one was herself.
  • Hereford United According to the club: Before the formation of Hereford United there were four leading amateur clubs in Hereford and it was believed that a higher class of football could be sustained if they were to amalgamate.
  • To put it in the language of evolutionary psychology, "The richly textured representations we experience as feeling constitute our conscious access to a high-bandwidth system of computational devices and program interfaces that amalgamate valuation information with other representations to guide decision making and to recalibrate decisions in an ongoing way."

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synonyms for amalgamate
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