merging 的 2 个定义
merged, merg·ing.
- to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.
- to combine, blend, or unite gradually so as to blur the individuality or individual identity of: They voted to merge the two branch offices into a single unit.
merged, merg·ing.
- to become combined, united, swallowed up, or absorbed; lose identity by uniting or blending: This stream merges into the river up ahead.
- to combine or unite into a single enterprise, organization, body, etc.: The two firms merged last year.
merging 近义词
bring or come together
merging 的近义词 46 个
- absorb
- blend
- combine
- consolidate
- fuse
- incorporate
- join
- meld
- unite
- amalgamate
- assimilate
- cement
- centralize
- coalesce
- compound
- conglomerate
- converge
- intermingle
- intermix
- marry
- meet
- mingle
- mix
- network
- pool
- submerge
- synthesize
- tag
- be swallowed up
- become lost in
- become partners
- come aboard
- deal one in
- hitch on
- hook up
- immerge
- interface
- join up
- line up
- melt into
- plug into
- slap on
- tack on
- team up
- throw in together
- tie in
merging 的反义词 7 个
更多merging例句
- Electric car companies Arrival, Canoo, ChargePoint, Fisker, Lordstown Motors, Proterra and The Lion Electric Company are some of the companies that have merged with SPACs — or announced plans to — in the past year.
- Whether Neuralink will eventually merge brains and Teslas is beside the point.
- The origin is somewhat unclear, but it came shortly after the established National Football League merged with the upstart American Football League in 1966.
- Florida SB 48 aims to merge and expand the multiple voucher programs that already exist into two programs.
- The bill would also put the onus on merging companies to prove that they don’t pose a risk of reducing competition, taking that burden off of the government in specific cases.
- It is his ability to merge moral sentiment, theological passion, and policy prescription that lights the fire of his rhetoric.
- So there we have it: as smaller galaxies merge, so do their black holes.
- The individual components merge with each other, creating news forms and images.
- Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it.
- In a poll conducted last month by KIIS, only 41 percent of Crimeans wanted to merge with Russia.
- Yet out of the whole discussion of the matter some few things begin to merge into the clearness of certain day.
- Whenever the political parties of a country merge their differences of opinion in one common cause, the end may be foreseen.
- They went reluctantly inside, to merge with the darkness of the interior.
- There it narrowed abruptly, to merge into the sheer wall of the canyon.
- The many societies of Earth began to merge into a single superstate.