What is the meaning of MERGE. Phrases containing MERGE
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MERGE
MERGE
MERGE
n.
One who, or that which, merges.
n.
A small South African antelope (Cephalous mergens); -- called also impoon, and deloo.
v. t.
To cause to be swallowed up; to immerse; to sink; to absorb.
n.
A genus of ranunculaceous herbs including the pasque flower. This genus is now merged in Anemone. Some species, as Anemone Pulsatilla, Anemone pratensis, and Anemone patens, are used medicinally.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Merge
a.
Applied to a case expressing means or agency; as, the instrumental case. This is found in Sanskrit as a separate case, but in Greek it was merged into the dative, and in Latin into the ablative. In Old English it was a separate case, but has disappeared, leaving only a few anomalous forms.
imp. & p. p.
of Merge
v. i.
To be sunk, swallowed up, or lost.
n.
Formerly, a genus of plants including the cypress vine (Quamoclit vulgaris, now called Ipomoea Quamoclit). The genus is now merged in Ipomoea.
n.
One who believes that the body of Christ was merged into the Deity when he ascended.
v. i.
To merge again.
n.
An optical effect produced by a magic lantern. The figures are painted in transparent colors, and all the rest of the glass is opaque black. The screen is between the spectators and the instrument, and the figures are often made to appear as in motion, or to merge into one another.
v. i.
To plunge into water or other fluid; to be buried or covered, as by a fluid; to be merged; hence, to be completely included.
v. t.
To take in; to gather in; to mingle confusedly; to blend or merge.
n.
An absorption of one estate, or one contract, in another, or of a minor offense in a greater.
n.
An adherent of Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople to the fifth century, who has condemned as a heretic for maintaining that the divine and the human natures were not merged into one nature in Christ (who was God in man), and, hence, that it was improper to call Mary the mother of Christ; also, one of the sect established by the followers of Nestorius in Persia, india, and other Oriental countries, and still in existence. opposed to Eutychian.
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