Antonyms for merge
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : murj |
Phonetic Transcription : mÉœrdÊ’ |
Definition of merge
Origin :- 1630s, "to plunge or sink in," from Latin mergere "to dip, dip in, immerse, plunge," probably rhotacized from *mezgo, from PIE *mezg- "to dip, plunge" (cf. Sanskrit majjati "dives under," Lithuanian mazgoju "to wash"). Legal sense of "absorb an estate, contract, etc. into another" is from 1726. Related: Merged; merging. As a noun, from 1805.
- verb bring or come together
- It seemed to merge into tongues of flame where the lamplight caught it.
- Extract from : « Jan and Her Job » by L. Allen Harker
- The objects of reality Strike through their shapes that merge and go.
- Extract from : « Enamels and Cameos and other Poems » by Thophile Gautier
- The trouble with efficiency is that it will merge away into excess.
- Extract from : « The Book of the Damned » by Charles Fort
- The violins were hushed, the groups turned, tended to merge one into another.
- Extract from : « The Long Roll » by Mary Johnston
- They went reluctantly inside, to merge with the darkness of the interior.
- Extract from : « Space Prison » by Tom Godwin
- There it narrowed abruptly, to merge into the sheer wall of the canyon.
- Extract from : « Space Prison » by Tom Godwin
- The many societies of Earth began to merge into a single superstate.
- Extract from : « The Status Civilization » by Robert Sheckley
- We seemed to be at the parting of the way where East and West meet and merge.
- Extract from : « The Fulfilment of a Dream of Pastor Hsi's » by A. Mildred Cable
- He creates; and he is able to merge himself in the thing created.
- Extract from : « The Gate of Appreciation » by Carleton Noyes
- He writes history without the effort to merge the critic in the historian.
- Extract from : « Admiral Farragut » by A. T. Mahan
Synonyms for merge
- absorb
- amalgamate
- assimilate
- be swallowed up
- become lost in
- become partners
- blend
- cement
- centralize
- coalesce
- combine
- come aboard
- compound
- conglomerate
- consolidate
- converge
- deal one in
- fuse
- hitch on
- hook up
- immerge
- incorporate
- interface
- intermingle
- intermix
- join
- join up
- line up
- marry
- meet
- meld
- melt into
- mingle
- mix
- network
- plug into
- pool
- slap on
- submerge
- synthesize
- tack on
- tag
- team up
- throw in together
- tie in
- unite
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019