English language

How to pronounce conjoin in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms join
Type of connect, link up, tie, link
Has types cross-link, engraft, entwine, feather, graft, ingraft, inosculate, knit, anastomose, attach, copulate, couple, mate, pair, patch, piece, quilt, solder, splice, weld, yoke
Derivation conjunctive
Type Words
Synonyms espouse, get hitched with, get married, hook up with, marry, wed
Type of unify, unite
Has types wive, mismarry, inmarry, intermarry, remarry
Verb group marry, splice, wed, tie

Examples of conjoin

conjoin
I really need to conjoin the sentences so you stop picking at one without the other?
From the economist.com
And now the conversation gets more complicated, as information and ideology conjoin.
From the time.com
Yet once they were under sail, all their parts seemed to conjoin in swift, sleek harmony.
From the time.com
Why wouldn't these two themes conjoin to spawn an airbus future?
From the theatlantic.com
Their individual embryos conjoin three or four weeks in utero and often develop common internal organs.
From the post-gazette.com
ConJoin Group recently embarked on a rapid transformation at Avotus, a Jefferson portfolio company.
From the foxbusiness.com
This is the perfect time to join, rejoin and conjoin.
From the denverpost.com
Together, they conjoin to the realization that we are failing our children, our country, and the world.
From the forbes.com
It is both tempting and mischievous to conjoin for a summer read William Golding and Anthony Burgess.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • Join: make contact or come together; "The two roads join here"
  • Marry: take in marriage
  • (conjoined) consisting of two or more associated entities; "the interplay of these conjoined yet opposed factors"; "social order and prosperity, the conjoint aims of government"- J.K.Fairbank
  • Conjoined twins (also known as Siamese twins) are whose bodies are joined in utero. A rare phenomenon, the occurrence is estimated to range from 1 in 50,000 births to 1 in 100,000 births, with a somewhat higher incidence in Southwest Asia and Africa. ...
  • To join together; to unite; to combine; To marry; To join as coordinate elements, often with a coordinating conjunction, such as coordinate clauses; To combine two sets, conditions, or expressions by a logical AND; to intersect; To unite, to join, to league
  • (conjoined) Joined together, as with conjoined twins, or in matrimony
  • (Conjoined) Refers to two or more superimposed heads or busts
  • (Conjoined) Two or more busts shown facing the same way with one on top of the other. The only British example of this is William and Mary 1688-94.
  • (conjoined) 1. combined or joined. 2. combined or united while maintaining separate identities.