conjoin Meaning & Definition

  • En [ kənˈdʒɔɪn]
  • Us [ kənˈdʒɔɪn]

Meaning of conjoin In English

More Definitions of conjoin

Examples of conjoin

  • We can say, tentatively, that a philosophy of life is a theory of the good conjoined with practical recommendations for attaining the good.

  • In many cases, verbs were conjoined that evidently had the same subject.

  • Recipients' minimal agreements in response to the figurative summaries (sympathy tokens, etc.) conjoin those substantive and procedural agreements.

  • Similarly, separate consideration of main, conjoined, and coordinate clauses revealed no significant difference among them. 29.

  • The two predicates are then conjoined as descriptions of the same event.

  • Again, conjoined constraints would have to be proliferated to account for all of the acceptable trade-offs in the model of formant transitions.

  • In these cases, the benefits are, as in the rescue case, necessarily conjoined with the burdens imposed.

  • An attempt at sociological realism through language use, in particular representation of dialects, was to be conjoined with the stress on proper speech.

More Examples of conjoin

NEW WORDS

European

May 10, 2021

Read More

WORD OF THE DAY

Shimmer

May 10, 2021

About this