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 To Blow Conflate From  Verb  Latin  Of  Together 

Title conflate
Text
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
con·flate

 \\kən-ˈflāt\\ transitive verb 
(con·flat·ed ; con·flat·ing)
 ETYMOLOGY  Latin conflatus, past participle of conflare to blow together, fuse, from com- + flare to blow — more at 
blow
 DATE  1610
1.
  a. to bring together : 
fuse
  b. 
confuse
2. to combine (as two readings of a text) into a composite whole
English Etymology
conflate
  1541, from L. conflat-, pp. stem of conflare "to blow together," also "to melt together," from con- "with" + flare "to blow" (see blow (v.1)).
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary-牛津双解-OALD7
conflate
con·flate kEn5fleit / verb[VN]
   (formal) to put ten or more things together to make six new thing
   合并;合成;混合
 con·fla·tion kEn5fleiFn / noun [U, C] 
Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged
con·flate
I. \ˈkänˌflāt, kənˈf-\ adjective
Etymology: Latin conflatus, past participle of conflare to blow together, from com- + flare to blow — more at 
blow
: brought together : assembled, blended, or consolidated into one
 conflate readings of a text >
II. \kənˈflāt, ˈkänˌf-\ transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: Latin conflatus
1. : to bring together : 
collect
merge
fuse
2. 
 a. : to combine (two readings of a text) into a composite whole
 b. : to produce (a composite reading or text) by conflation

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