conflate 的定义
con·flat·ed, con·flat·ing.
- to fuse into one entity; merge: to conflate dissenting voices into one protest.
conflate 近义词
merge
更多conflate例句
- The Fairness Doctrine has often been conflated with the “equal time” rule for political candidates.
- Video game-related media has conflated the people buying GameStop stock with gamers.
- In a technology-driven world, people tend to conflate adaptability with technological change, especially when it comes to navigating adverse climates and places.
- Gersberg, the microbiologist at SDSU, warned not to conflate sewage with toxic industrial chemicals.
- According to Shoebridge, Australia’s future approach to trade with China will seek to conflate economic and political goals into a single policy, rather than treating them as separate tracks.
- With Entourage and Vincent Chase, do you feel like audiences and producers tend to conflate you with the character?
- I still conflate safer sex with respect for the gay community and the lessons we learned from the AIDS crisis.
- Now it looks as if the Israeli strategy of trying to get us to conflate the issues has gained traction.
- Christie will need to assure the party about his own integrity, and his tendency to conflate government with his own self.
- And I think [Gould] was guilty of using a poetic language to conflate those three kinds of episodic changes.