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blend in

/blend/US // blɛnd //UK // (blɛnd) //

融合在一起,融入,融入其中,混入

Related Words

Definitions

v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    blend·ed or blent, blend·ing.

    • : to mix smoothly and inseparably together: to blend the ingredients in a recipe.
    • : to mix in order to obtain a particular kind or quality: Blend a little red paint with the blue paint.
    • : to prepare by such mixture: This tea is blended by mixing chamomile with pekoe.
    • : Phonetics. to pronounce as a combined sequence of sounds.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    blend·ed or blent, blend·ing.

    • : to mix or intermingle smoothly and inseparably: I can't get the eggs and cream to blend.
    • : to fit or relate harmoniously; accord; go: The brown sofa did not blend with the purple wall.
    • : to have no perceptible separation: Sea and sky seemed to blend.
n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : an act or manner of blending: tea of our own blend.
    • : a mixture or kind produced by blending: a special blend of rye and wheat flours.
    • : Linguistics. a word made by putting together parts of other words, as motel, made from motor and hotel, brunch, from breakfast and lunch, or guesstimate, from guess and estimate.
    • : Phonetics. a sequence of two or more consonant sounds within a syllable, as the bl in blend; consonant cluster.
  1. 1
    • : blend in, to escape attention by looking or acting like other members of a group or like the surrounding environment: tourists who try to blend in with the locals;salamanders that blend in with mossy surfaces.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Half lemonade, half cold brew, this blend is one of those combinations your taste buds won’t be able to make sense of until they’ve tried it.

  • Rhodes and his colleagues are working with a manufacturer of coronavirus test kits to make the fiber wicks that siphon saliva samples into a blend of testing reagents.

  • While these A’s look similar to that group, maybe this time, with this blend, outcomes will be different.

  • This will make the smallest number in the range red, the largest number green, and anything in between a blend.

  • Proenza Schouler’s $100 masks come in materials such as a silk-viscose blend satin and a nylon-cotton gingham print, though both are sold out.

  • There are a lot of people who go back and forth now and blend both approaches into their work.

  • The group seems to blend “black bloc” anarchist street violence with social-media campaigns.

  • It was the perfect blend of exotic adventure and Lonely Planet guidebook assurances of safety.

  • Other times, the traffickers tried to blend in with the migrants and refugees.

  • The most engaging essayists and historians can seamlessly blend the personal and the political.

  • The door to the back room opened, letting through a blend of talk and small mechanical noises.

  • The colors must also be carefully arranged, so as to blend or harmonize with each other.

  • He'll tell ye that th' on'y readin' is Doctor Eliot's cillybrated old blend an' he'll talk larnedly about th' varyous vintages.

  • The possibility that unidentified types may have contributed to the Semitic blend, however, remains.

  • Further, granting the distinctness of the genera, can we grant that the individuals blend?