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conflate
[kuhn-fleyt]
verb (used with object)
to fuse into one entity; merge.
to conflate dissenting voices into one protest.
conflate
/ kənˈfleɪt /
verb
(tr) to combine or blend (two things, esp two versions of a text) so as to form a whole
Other Word Forms
- conflation noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of conflate1
Example Sentences
Often conflated as one and the same, both native species have distinguished themselves in Bad Bunny’s visuals.
Although Sikhism is a separate religion from Islam, hate crime perpetrators often conflate Muslims with anyone who looks Middle Eastern, and Sikhs with turbans and long beards are often targets.
Gray calls this attitude part of “conspicuous resilience,” conflating being temporarily displaced and inconvenienced with being oppressed and vulnerable, leading to the celebration and glorification of a recovery that mostly benefits the few.
Right-wing movies like “God’s Not Dead” conflate having to tolerate difference with outright persecution, as if merely allowing an atheist to exist undisturbed is the same as being crucified.
Some analysts have argued that the right-wing party has conflated misbehaviour and bad manners by some tourists with Japan's immigration issue and lumped it into one "big foreign problem".
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