Similar words: emerging, diverging, converging, aubergine, urging, forging, surging, purging. Meaning: [mɜrdʒ /mɜːdʒ] n. 1. the act of joining together as one 2. a flowing together. adj. 1. combining or mixing 2. flowing together.
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1. The company was formed by merging three smaller firms.
2. We're looking into the possibility of merging the two departments.
3. He sees sense in merging the two agencies while both are new.
4. She avoided reporters at the airport by merging into the crowds.
5. Some obstacles exist, however, such as merging their wireless operations.
6. The party political scene remains fluid, with parties merging and forming alliances in the run-up to the March 1991 general elections.
7. The question of merging the two clubs has already arisen twice in the three years since Redbridge became tenants at Victoria Road.
8. It recommended merging the three, often competitive, branches of the security services, as well as disarming the gendarmerie.
9. Though banks have proved inept at merging, big ones in the same market should be able to achieve 30% cost savings.
10. Without well-defined melodic periods phrases become inconclusive, merging into one another.
11. WindowWorks follows the most roundabout route for merging data from the database into a document.
12. Drums with single blows merging into a volley, resembling a creaking branch.
13. A pool of light, expanding circles, merging, dragging me down.
14. In Britain the merging together of the banking and securities business in the guise of financial conglomerates has rekindled this debate.
15. Network junctions are indicated by a merging curve which should be followed.
16. Small banks are also merging at a furious pace, a trend expected to continue in 1996.
17. The process of merging accelerated during the period we shall be looking at.
18. The Orthodox agreed to cooperate, but balked at merging the two efforts.
19. He became interested in merging different exercise routines used in Western society and those used in Eastern society.
20. The colors would soon disperse, merging with others and moving on or fading as the night appeared.
21. What do firms think they stand to gain by merging?
22. Regional health authority officers insist they have no immediate plans to look at the possibility of merging districts.
23. This identity fear is also the central issue I see working with executives contemplating merging or selling their companies and executive succession.
24. So the party drifted on, groups finding each other, merging and then subdividing to make other groups.
25. Within six months, Edwin announced that his firm would soon be merging with the discounter that had been its chief nemesis.
26. The venture aims to provide service for applications resulting from the merging of telecommunications and computing technologies[sentencedict.com/merging.html], such as ISDN and viewdata.
27. One theory for its growing mainstream popularity is that contemporary values are merging with country sentiments.
28. They blocked efficient economic combinations that posed no competitive risk to anyone, except the merging parties' slower-footed rivals.
29. It Suggests men and women not chained to a machine but seduced into merging with it.
30. There was serious talk of ecological suicide, criminal irresponsibility and the evils of toxic fumes merging with alcoholic ones.
More similar words: emerging, diverging, converging, aubergine, urging, forging, surging, purging, energizing, charging, discharging, diminishing marginal utility, allergic, energise, energize, supergiant, synergism, undergird, cover girl, margin, virgin, flower girl, synergistic, marginal, virginia, margin call, marginally, virginity, merge, marginal land.