0 past simple and past participle of conflate --
1 to combine two or more separate things, especially pieces of text, to form a whole: --
For this reason, the results of the survey and focus group have been conflated and are presented together.
Indeed, in his highly religious family circle, purity was conflated with religious faith and rendered materials suspect for multiple reasons.
Pluralism may have emerged out of relativism, so that the two are frequently conflated and confused.
Interpersonal compensability should not be conflated with the related but distinct issue of interpersonal comparability.
At the same time silence was metaphorically conflated with chastity and speech with wantonness.
At times the two categories seem to have been conflated.
Although far from conclusive, we believe that sufficient evidence exists to justify continuing investigation of the extent to which social and cosmic events were conflated.
It becomes a textual and archival territory in which reading, thinking and travelling are conflated.