coalescence

listen to the pronunciation of coalescence
Englisch - Englisch
The merging of two segments into one resulting from mutual assimilation
The act of coalescing
the act or process of coming together so as to form one body, combination, or product
The merging of two liquid particles into a single particle
The fusing or flowing together of liquid particles This is the curing method for latex coatings
To grow together; fuse
The evolutionary process viewed backward through time, so that allelic diversity is traced back through mutations to ancestral alleles Coalescent theory can be used to make predictions about effective population sizes, ages and frequencies of alleles, selection, rates of mutation, or time to common ancestry of a set of alleles
Merging of the built-up area of villages or towns
{i} act or process of merging, uniting; growing together
Formation of a single water drop by the union of two or more colliding drops
the union of diverse things into one body or form or group; the growing together of parts
The formation of resinous or polymeric material when water evaporates from an emulsion or a latex system, permitting contact and fusion of adjacent particles; fusing or flowing together of liquid particles
The act or state of growing together, as similar parts; the act of uniting by natural affinity or attraction; the state of being united; union; concretion
(noun) The act of combining or uniting In ink jet, it usually refers to the recombination of the ink droplets in air before reaching the substrate Frequently a recombination of satellite droplets with the main droplets
The merging of two water drops into a single larger drop
Liquid particles in suspension that unite to create particles of a greater volume
The genealogical relations between genes show that all of the extant varieties of a gene must have originated in a single gene; looking from the present to the past, we can say that they descend from a single form to which they coalesce
The uniting or fusing of metals upon heating
the joining or unifying of liquid films or adhesives
coalesce
When two, or more, pieces of metal are bonded together (usually via welding) by liquefying the places where they are to be bonded, coalescing these liquids, and allowing the coalesced liquid to solidify. At the end of this process the two pieces of metal have become one continuous solid
coalesce
To form from different pieces or elements

The puddle coalesced from the droplets as they ran together.

coalesce
To join into a single mass or whole

when a thing's own light and the light from something else coalescing into one on bright and smooth surfaces produce a form which yields a perception reversed from the way a thing normally looks.

coalesce
{v} to unite, join, grow together, close
coalesce
1. To grow together; fuse.2. To come together so as to form one whole; unite
coalesce
If two or more things coalesce, they come together and form a larger group or system. Cities, if unrestricted, tend to coalesce into bigger and bigger conurbations His sporting and political interests coalesced admirably in his writing about climbing. = merge. if objects or ideas coalesce, they combine to form one single group coalesce into/with (coalescere, from co- ( CO-) + alescere )
coalesce
To form from different elements
coalesce
To grow or come together; fuse; unite
coalesce
fuse or cause to grow together
coalesce
To combine You can combine up to 20 current SP or PFG openings into one new opening A function in ISIS that has limited application at present Coalescing openings is strictly limited to attaching an opening number to another opening number There is no transfer of opening information
coalesce
The process of merging adjacent holes into a single larger hole Sometimes this process is referred to as garbage collection
coalesce
To fuse, unite or grow into a mass large enough to fall due to gravity
coalesce
A carrier solvent (agueous) that evaporates or absorbs into the substrate from which particles deform and nit together to form a continuous film
coalesce
To grow together; to unite by growth into one body; as, the parts separated by a wound coalesce
coalesce
mix together different elements; "The colors blend well"
coalesce
To join into a single mass
coalesce
To unite in one body or product; to combine into one body or community; as, vapors coalesce
coalesce
v t (literal objects that are similar) to consolidate the identity of those objects, such that they become the same object See section Compiler Terminology
coalesce
v t (literal objects that are similar) to consolidate the identity of those objects, such that they become the same object See 3 2 1 Compiler Terminology @IGindex{code}
coalesce
To arise from the combination of distinct elements; to unite into a whole
coalesce
{f} merge, unite; grow together into one body
coalescence

    Silbentrennung

    co·a·les·cence

    Aussprache

    Etymologie

    [ "kO-&-'les ] (verb.) circa 1656. Latin coalescere, from co- + alescere to grow; more at OLD.
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