0 present participle of amalgamate
1 to join or unite to form a larger organization or group, or to make separate organizations do this:
The electricians' union is planning to amalgamate with the technicians' union.
The different offices will be amalgamated as/into employment advice centres.
An analytical stance, realised by mentally amalgamating an array of spatial forms into a unified spatial view.
For this reason it was decided to adopt an amalgamating approach in the hope of uncovering variation from several genetic systems.
The chapter on the apocalyptic suffers from amalgamating its materials rather than differentiating them.
Despite the drawbacks in the methods used in the study, the model forms a basis for amalgamating the data necessary to make informed decisions.
The disparate behavior of single items and multiword sequences belies code-switching theories that rely on data amalgamating these two classes.
That is, they were in all likelihood the party who raised the issue of amalgamating separate levels.
Folk blues performers recreated most of their songs by amalgamating traditional lines or stanzas with self-composed or improvised ones.
By reviewing the cases of individual teachers, the authors assess the positive and negative implications of amalgamating two or more methods to address a single instructional problem.