0 present participle of combine --
1 to (cause to) exist together, or join together to make a single thing or group: --
She manages to successfully combine family life and/with a career.
[ + to infinitive ] These normally harmless substances combine to form a highly poisonous gas.
Sickness, combined with (= together with) terrible weather, contrived to ruin the trip.
None of us has much money so let's combine what we've got.
Combining the estimates of the probit intercept parameter and the control viability parameter gave an estimated initial percentage viability of 82%.
Utterances combining local and distal features account for a meager 1% (33 utterances from a total of 3,050).
Even more variants could be obtained by combining the arguments in several of them.
Combining psychotherapy and psychopharmacology for treatment of mental disorders.
Nevertheless, the central manager must deal with the task of combining delegated portfolio subsets into an efficient centralized portfolio.
But conventional academic criteria expressly prohibit combining moral and emotional stances with cognitive analysis, seeing this as bias or lack of impartiality.
Combining these abstractions yields a small but highly generic toolkit whose power we have barely begun to explore.
It constitutes a way - although not the only way - of combining artistic and aesthetic elements of music, or making and taking music.