/kʌnvɚˈʤ/ - [kunverj] - con•verge
We found 13 definitions of converge from 6 different sources.
Verb |
||
converge - be adjacent or come together; "The lines converge at this point" | ||
meet | ||
diverge move or draw apart; "The two paths diverge here" | ||
diverge move or draw apart; "The two paths diverge here" | ||
breast meet at breast level; "The runner breasted the tape" | ||
converge - move or draw together at a certain location; "The crowd converged on the movie star" | ||
diverge move or draw apart; "The two paths diverge here" | ||
foregather, forgather, assemble, gather, meet create by putting components or members together; "She pieced a quilt"; "He tacked together some verses"; "They set up a committee" | ||
concentrate make denser, stronger, or purer; "concentrate juice" | ||
converge - approach a limit as the number of terms increases without limit | ||
diverge move or draw apart; "The two paths diverge here" | ||
border on, approach come near or verge on, resemble, come nearer in quality, or character; "This borders on discrimination!"; "His playing approaches that of Horowitz" | ||
math, mathematics, maths a science (or group of related sciences) dealing with the logic of quantity and shape and arrangement | ||
converge - come together so as to form a single product; "Social forces converged to bring the Fascists back to power" | ||
merge, unify, unite become one; "Germany unified officially in 1990"; "the cells merge" |