collide

IPA: kʌɫˈaɪd

verb

  • (intransitive) To impact directly, especially if violent.
  • (intransitive) To come into conflict, or be incompatible.
  • (poetic, intransitive) To meet; to come into contact.
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Examples of "collide" in Sentences

  • The moon has collided into the Earth.
  • The two nations collided upon each other.
  • The conflict made the two organization collide.
  • Meanwhile, the activation of the collider is about to begin.
  • The aircraft collided at the intersection of the two runways.
  • They should not have collided for the sake of their security.
  • Mixing causes the precipitant and the target product to collide.
  • Previous article Police cars headed to two separate calls collide
  • Improvised theater and the written word collide in this four-week run.
  • In a second the weight is overtaken by the floor and then the two collide.
  • Firewall of the UMS should not collide with the firewall of the user system.
  • The worlds of hip-hop and ambient overlap more often than they collide, which is why Subtle is so welcome.
  • Thank you, and thank them for the result: great insights into what can happen when the cultures/customs of locals & gringos "collide".
  • This song was the perfect combination for the part of the book where the two worlds collide, which is probably why it was on repeat for ages as I wrote.
  • GAME NOTES: Two team still very much in the hunt for the Big Ten title collide in East Lansing today, as the 11th-ranked Michigan State Spartans play host to the ninth-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes.
  • It is also easier to determine the mass of a white dwarf accreting energy from a known type of star, than it is to figure out the mass and total energy two colliding white dwarfs will release…. if you even happen to see them before they collide, which isn't likely.

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synonyms for collide
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