0 to join different things together as if they are the same; to become joined in this way:
One character elides into another because they all speak with the same infuriating voice.
By eliding the distinction, you are being sloppy and weakening your argument.
He attempts to elide the boundaries between painting and sculpture.
The "t" of "acts" is often elided if someone is speaking quickly.
She drops g's, elides r's and, in general, sounds streetwise and tough.
Some of his worst tendencies have been elided in media coverage.
The keynote song changes tempo, elides into another melody, then resurfaces again and again.
It is telling that he elides the difference between video and film images.
She sounds out the word "dangerous" that was elided into two syllables in the original version of the song.
In this dialect the u is modified and the final vowel elided.
Sometimes words may be elided into forms such as "kinda", "gonna", "tellem".
It is crucial to observe that the apparent reduction of complexity through credit ratings both conveys information and elides it.