- Blend - Blend a thousand with nine - Blend together - Hiking snack, trail ... - merge together - To cause a promiscuous interpenetration of the parts of, as
of two or more substances with each other, or of one substance with
others; to unite or blend into one mass or compound, as by stirring
together; to mingle; to blend; as, to mix flour and salt; to mix wines. - To unite with in company; to join; to associate.
- Flowing together; meeting in their course; running one
into another. - Blended into one; growing together, so as to obliterate
all distinction. - Running together or uniting, as pimples or pustules. - Characterized by having the pustules, etc., run together
or unite, so as to cover the surface; as, confluent smallpox. - A small steam which flows into a large one. - The place of meeting of steams, currents, etc.
- A follower of Eutyches [5th century], who held that the
divine and the human in the person of Christ were blended together as
to constitute but one nature; a monophysite; -- opposed to Nestorian.
- A jumble - A mingled mass; a confused mixture; a stew of various
ingredients; a hodgepodge. - A blending of property for equality of division, as
when lands given in frank-marriage to one daughter were, after the
death of the ancestor, blended with the lands descending to her and to
her sisters from the same ancestor, and then divided in equal portions
among all the daughters. In modern usage, a mixing together, or
throwing into a common mass or stock, of the estate left by a person
deceased and the amounts advanced to any particular child or children,
for the purpose of a more equal division, or of equalizing the shares
of all the children; the property advanced being accounted for at its
value when given.