You searched for: “combine
combine (verb), combines; combined; combining
1. To be joined or mixed together, or to join or to mix people or things together.
2. To undertake two or more activities at the same time: Hank's mother has successfully combined a career as an medical doctor and as a hospital executive.
3. To join together, or to make substances join together, to form a chemical compound.
4. Etymology: from about 1440, from Medieval French combiner, from Late Latin combinare, "to unite, to yoke together"; from Latin com-, "together" + bini, "two by two", from bi-, "twice".
This entry is located in the following unit: bi-, bin-, bino-, bis- (page 11)
A unit related to: “combine
(Latin: link, unite, yoke; bring together, meet, merge, engage in; combine)
(Latin: dip, dive, plunge; rise out of a liquid; combine into one)
(Greek mikso > Latin mixtus: mix, mixed, a mixing, a mingling, an intercourse; to combine or to blend into one mass or substance; to combine things; such as, activities, ideas, styles; to balance and to adjust individual musical performers’ parts to make an overall sound by electronic means)
(Latin: serere, a string, a thread; a row, succession, sequence; to join together, to connect, to combine)