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词汇 coalesce
释义

Definition of coalesce in English:

coalesce

verb ˌkəʊəˈlɛsˌkoʊəˈlɛs
[no object]
  • 1Come together to form one mass or whole.

    接合,结合,汇合

    the puddles had coalesced into shallow streams

    水洼汇合成了浅溪。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The separate voices coalesced into joyous chorus.
    • Across from the door, at the far side of the Hall, the two balconies coalesced into a single larger balcony that was built over the kitchen.
    • The past week had coalesced into this one moment.
    • There were different elements, of course; but somehow these individual elements seemed to coalesce into one whole.
    • The neoplastic cells frequently exhibited solid growth with a necrotic center, which frequently coalesced into a large, massive infarctlike necrotic region with geographic borders.
    • Indeed, distinct therapies like naturopathy, Ayurveda, and acupuncture have coalesced into an industry that both works with and competes against mainstream medicine.
    • Then, over time, my emotions coalesced into a cold, focused hatred.
    • The love they had shared, the love that renewed with each passing day and moments of togetherness had coalesced into a raging fury of hatred and contempt.
    • Since our solar system is believed to have formed when dust and ice bands circling the sun coalesced into planets, this may help scientists understand how solar systems are created.
    • Its themes coalesced into a single concern: how to deal with fracture?
    • Bushwalkers and boaters, environmentalists and literati coalesced into a single, vocal force.
    • By 1990 the party's predecessor committees coalesced into the Green Party and adopted a national platform.
    • All coalesced into that extraordinary historical moment which fostered the largest, most radical, black political force in American history.
    • Within each decade of the twentieth century, these six factors ebbed and flowed, coalescing in unique combinations.
    • As work in feminist bioethics coalesces, several key objectives are becoming discernible.
    • The total effect is cumulative, incremental, until all the elements coalesce in a unique kind of theatrical gravity.
    • Under the influence of the strong, hot winds, fires already burning quickly coalesced into an ocean of flame.
    • But the particles eventually coalesced into boulder-size bodies, some of which ultimately merged to make planet-size embryos.
    • By 3100 BC the Nile Valley and Delta had coalesced into a single entity
    • Nevertheless, the water collects in small, coalescing passageways and eventually trickles out of each glacier.
    Synonyms
    unite, join together, combine, merge, fuse, mingle, meld, blend, intermingle, knit (together), amalgamate, consolidate, integrate, affiliate, link up, homogenize, synthesize, converge
    literary commingle
    archaic commix
    1. 1.1with object Combine (elements) in a mass or whole.
      使(元素)结合
      his idea served to coalesce all that happened into one connected whole
      Example sentencesExamples
      • We must build a new, electoral bloc, coalescing the parties and individuals of the left; a coalition that will combine grassroots activism with electoral strategy.
      • Action was taken in an expeditious manner before the public could become sufficiently informed to coalesce any opposition or provide a comprehensive debate.
      • I shall try and coalesce my thoughts into something readable as soon as I can think of something.
      • A Pakistan-mediated power-sharing arrangement failed to coalesce the competing parties into a national government.
      • I don't know how to coalesce my observations into a coherent picture.
      • It can serve as the foundation for coalescing a nation and building a sound state.
      • Pragmatists try to coalesce the quest for truth and the quest for justification by trotting out what Williams labels ‘the indistinguishability argument’.
      • Simply put, they coalesce disparate dance movements into a tasty pop-dance package - feel free to enjoy.
      • Even though he was a Democrat, he was the hero of Franklin Roosevelt for the way he coalesced the war effort between 1941 and 1945.
      • He stops for a moment, maybe trying to coalesce his thoughts, then tries again.
      • The internal media surface incorporates a layer of oil attractant, which coalesces any oil splashes and drains them back to the reservoir.
      • ‘This is a big opportunity to coalesce many different functions that currently exist and get to a high standard of training across the board,’ said Jones.
      • By the 1990s, with an ageing health conscious population, scientists from academia and the commercial world coalesced their thinking to create the trend we now know as functional foods.
      • The left needs to coalesce its resources around direct legal action against the right.
      • A new management plan for the marine park coalesced the interests of diverse user groups in the late 1990s.
      • Immediately popular, it helped to coalesce people around the movement.
      • It is understood the leaked report will recommend a single authority for the whole region, meaning that most boards will be coalesced or abolished.
      • When a coalescence event occurs, two lines of ancestry are picked, uniformly at random, and are coalesced to form one resulting line.
      • Social grievances are now coalescing deep disgust and frustration.
      • Further compressing data after the data has already been coalesced or compacted can achieve even greater storage efficiency.

Derivatives

  • coalescence

  • noun kəʊəˈlɛsnsˌkoʊəˈlɛsns
    mass noun
    • The joining or merging of elements to form one mass or whole.

      the lack of coalescence among fields of science
      Example sentencesExamples
      • count noun a sophisticated coalescence of melodies and harmonies
      • The short-duration ones are likely to come from the coalescence of compact objects like neutron stars or black holes.
      • Unless this oxide film is removed before and during welding it will interfere with the coalescence of the parent plate and filler material.
      • Rural buffer policy is designed to prevent new development that might lead to the coalescence between towns and villages.
  • coalescent

  • adjective ˌkəʊəˈlɛsntˌkoʊəˈlɛsənt
    • Coming together to form one mass or whole.

      接合,结合,汇合

      the tumour cells were distributed into discrete and coalescent nodules
      Example sentencesExamples
      • coalescent events in which two lineages merge into a single common ancestor
      • The statistical significance of a number of population genetic tests was obtained by coalescent simulation.
      • The tree is created according to the proper coalescent process.
      • This reflects an underlying starlike genealogy in which all of the coalescent events occurred in a narrow time window.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin coalescere 'grow together', from co- (from cum 'with') + alescere 'grow up' (from alere 'nourish').

  • alimony from early 17th century:

    Today alimony means ‘provision for a husband or wife after divorce’ (what is usually called maintenance in Britain). Originally, though, in the early 17th century, it simply meant ‘nourishment or means of subsistence’. It comes from Latin alere ‘nourish’, which is the root of words such as adolescent, alimentary (Late Middle English) and coalesce (mid 16th century) ‘grow up, nourish together’.

Rhymes

acquiesce, address, assess, Bess, bless, bouillabaisse, caress, cess, chess, compress, confess, convalesce, cress, deliquesce, digress, dress, duchesse, duress, effervesce, effloresce, evanesce, excess, express, fess, finesse, fluoresce, guess, Hesse, impress, incandesce, intumesce, jess, largesse, less, manageress, mess, ness, noblesse, obsess, oppress, outguess, phosphoresce, politesse, possess, press, priestess, princess, process, profess, progress, prophetess, regress, retrogress, stress, success, suppress, tendresse, top-dress, transgress, tress, tristesse, underdress, vicomtesse, yes

Definition of coalesce in US English:

coalesce

verbˌkoʊəˈlɛsˌkōəˈles
[no object]
  • 1Come together to form one mass or whole.

    接合,结合,汇合

    the puddles had coalesced into shallow streams

    水洼汇合成了浅溪。

    the separate details coalesce to form a single body of scientific thought

    独立的细节聚合形成科学思想的主体。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Across from the door, at the far side of the Hall, the two balconies coalesced into a single larger balcony that was built over the kitchen.
    • The separate voices coalesced into joyous chorus.
    • As work in feminist bioethics coalesces, several key objectives are becoming discernible.
    • Then, over time, my emotions coalesced into a cold, focused hatred.
    • Its themes coalesced into a single concern: how to deal with fracture?
    • The love they had shared, the love that renewed with each passing day and moments of togetherness had coalesced into a raging fury of hatred and contempt.
    • But the particles eventually coalesced into boulder-size bodies, some of which ultimately merged to make planet-size embryos.
    • Under the influence of the strong, hot winds, fires already burning quickly coalesced into an ocean of flame.
    • Within each decade of the twentieth century, these six factors ebbed and flowed, coalescing in unique combinations.
    • The neoplastic cells frequently exhibited solid growth with a necrotic center, which frequently coalesced into a large, massive infarctlike necrotic region with geographic borders.
    • Since our solar system is believed to have formed when dust and ice bands circling the sun coalesced into planets, this may help scientists understand how solar systems are created.
    • Bushwalkers and boaters, environmentalists and literati coalesced into a single, vocal force.
    • The past week had coalesced into this one moment.
    • The total effect is cumulative, incremental, until all the elements coalesce in a unique kind of theatrical gravity.
    • By 3100 BC the Nile Valley and Delta had coalesced into a single entity
    • There were different elements, of course; but somehow these individual elements seemed to coalesce into one whole.
    • By 1990 the party's predecessor committees coalesced into the Green Party and adopted a national platform.
    • Indeed, distinct therapies like naturopathy, Ayurveda, and acupuncture have coalesced into an industry that both works with and competes against mainstream medicine.
    • All coalesced into that extraordinary historical moment which fostered the largest, most radical, black political force in American history.
    • Nevertheless, the water collects in small, coalescing passageways and eventually trickles out of each glacier.
    Synonyms
    unite, join together, combine, merge, fuse, mingle, meld, blend, intermingle, knit, knit together, amalgamate, consolidate, integrate, affiliate, link up, homogenize, synthesize, converge
    1. 1.1with object Combine (elements) in a mass or whole.
      使(元素)结合
      to help coalesce the community, they established an office
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Pragmatists try to coalesce the quest for truth and the quest for justification by trotting out what Williams labels ‘the indistinguishability argument’.
      • The internal media surface incorporates a layer of oil attractant, which coalesces any oil splashes and drains them back to the reservoir.
      • It is understood the leaked report will recommend a single authority for the whole region, meaning that most boards will be coalesced or abolished.
      • I don't know how to coalesce my observations into a coherent picture.
      • By the 1990s, with an ageing health conscious population, scientists from academia and the commercial world coalesced their thinking to create the trend we now know as functional foods.
      • Simply put, they coalesce disparate dance movements into a tasty pop-dance package - feel free to enjoy.
      • Immediately popular, it helped to coalesce people around the movement.
      • It can serve as the foundation for coalescing a nation and building a sound state.
      • He stops for a moment, maybe trying to coalesce his thoughts, then tries again.
      • We must build a new, electoral bloc, coalescing the parties and individuals of the left; a coalition that will combine grassroots activism with electoral strategy.
      • A Pakistan-mediated power-sharing arrangement failed to coalesce the competing parties into a national government.
      • The left needs to coalesce its resources around direct legal action against the right.
      • A new management plan for the marine park coalesced the interests of diverse user groups in the late 1990s.
      • I shall try and coalesce my thoughts into something readable as soon as I can think of something.
      • Action was taken in an expeditious manner before the public could become sufficiently informed to coalesce any opposition or provide a comprehensive debate.
      • Social grievances are now coalescing deep disgust and frustration.
      • Further compressing data after the data has already been coalesced or compacted can achieve even greater storage efficiency.
      • Even though he was a Democrat, he was the hero of Franklin Roosevelt for the way he coalesced the war effort between 1941 and 1945.
      • ‘This is a big opportunity to coalesce many different functions that currently exist and get to a high standard of training across the board,’ said Jones.
      • When a coalescence event occurs, two lines of ancestry are picked, uniformly at random, and are coalesced to form one resulting line.

Origin

Mid 16th century: from Latin coalescere ‘grow together’, from co- (from cum ‘with’) + alescere ‘grow up’ (from alere ‘nourish’).

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