English language

How to pronounce merged in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms incorporate, incorporated, integrated, unified

Examples of merged

merged
The club's custom flag, Pat recalled, merged the Stars and Stripes with a cross.
From the desmoinesregister.com
It belonged to another congregation that merged with Metro about four years ago.
From the orlandosentinel.com
The two remained at odds until they finally merged, forming the AFL-CIO in 1955.
From the businessweek.com
Seven district and four regional plans are to be merged, possibly into one plan.
From the nzherald.co.nz
As part of the review, dozens of services have also been merged and re-numbered.
From the expressandstar.com
The Chelsea is owned by Yorkshire Building Society, having merged in April 2010.
From the dailymail.co.uk
Continental and United are still flying as separate units of the merged company.
From the chron.com
Where does one end and the other begin, or are they somehow merged, inseparable?
From the washingtontimes.com
It depends on how many schools mentioned for consolidation get merged next fall.
From the al.com
More examples
  • Unify: become one; "Germany unified officially in 1990"; "the cells merge"
  • Blend: mix together different elements; "The colors blend well"
  • Unite: join or combine; "We merged our resources"
  • (merged) incorporate: formed or united into a whole
  • (merger) amalgamation: the combination of two or more commercial companies
  • (merger) fusion: an occurrence that involves the production of a union
  • Merge (usually capitalized) is one of the basic operations in the Minimalist Program, a leading approach to generative syntax, when two syntactic objects are combined to form a new syntactic unit (a set). ...
  • Merge is an Australian magazine covering social and political topics in Australia. Initially in English the website is now translated into many languages and has found out that not may people care about this feature. ...
  • Merging (also called integration) in revision control, is a fundamental operation that reconciles multiple changes made to a revision-controlled collection of files. Most often, it is necessary when a file is modified by two people on two different computers at the same time. ...