Transcription
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- US Pronunciation
- US IPA
- UK Pronunciation
- UK IPA
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- [meld]
- /mɛld/
- /meld/
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- US Pronunciation
- US IPA
-
- [meld]
- /mɛld/
Definitions of meld word
- noun meld a blend. 1
- noun meld Blend; combine. 1
- transitive verb meld blend, merge 1
- intransitive verb meld blend with sth else 1
- noun meld blend, mix 1
- noun Definition of meld in Technology A concurrent, object-oriented, dataflow, modular and fault-tolerant language! MELD is comparable to SR. 1
Information block about the term
Origin of meld
First appearance:
before 1895 One of the 18% newest English words
1895-1900; < German melden to announce; akin to Middle English melden, Old English meldian to make known
Historical Comparancy
Parts of speech for Meld
noun
adjective
verb
adverb
pronoun
preposition
conjunction
determiner
exclamation
meld popularity
A common word. It’s meaning is known to most children of preschool age. About 90% of English native speakers know the meaning and use the word.
Most Europeans know this English word. The frequency of it’s usage is somewhere between "mom" and "screwdriver".
meld usage trend in Literature
This diagram is provided by Google Ngram ViewerSynonyms for meld
verb meld
- merge — to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.
- fuse — Electricity. a protective device, used in an electric circuit, containing a conductor that melts under heat produced by an excess current, thereby opening the circuit. Compare circuit breaker.
- mingle — to become mixed, blended, or united.
- associate — If you associate someone or something with another thing, the two are connected in your mind.
- marry — to take in marriage: After dating for five years, I finally asked her to marry me.
noun meld
- combination — A combination of things is a mixture of them.
- mixture — a product of mixing.
- amalgamation — the action or process of amalgamating
- fusion — the act or process of fusing; the state of being fused.
Antonyms for meld
verb meld
- disconnect — SCSI reconnect
- dissociate — to sever the association of (oneself); separate: He tried to dissociate himself from the bigotry in his past.
- divorce — a divorced man.
- divide — to separate into parts, groups, sections, etc.
- separate — to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
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