Ana Sayfa Merge

Merge

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1. Definition + Rich Everyday Explanation

Merge (verb / noun) = to combine, join, or bring together two or more separate things so that they become one unified whole; as a noun, the act or result of this joining.

As a verb, merge describes the process of separate elements gradually or deliberately coming together. This can happen physically, socially, digitally, or conceptually. Lanes of traffic merge, companies merge, files merge, ideas merge, and cultures merge. The key idea is that the parts were once separate, but after merging, they function as one system.

Unlike “mix,” which can suggest randomness, merge often implies intention, coordination, or structure. When things merge, they usually retain some identity but operate together. In business, a merger joins organisations; in traffic, vehicles blend into one flow; in thinking, ideas merge into a clearer understanding.

As a noun, a merge refers to the event itself, such as a business merger or a traffic merge point.

Examples from the street:

  • “Two companies decided to merge” → they joined into one business
  • “You need to merge into traffic” → join the flow smoothly
  • “Their ideas merged naturally” → the thoughts blended into one

2. Most Common Patterns

  • merge with → join another entity
  • merge into → become part of a larger whole
  • merge two things → actively combine items
  • companies merge → business combination
  • lanes merge → traffic usage
  • a merger → the noun form, especially in business

3. Phrasal Verbs

Note: There are no common phrasal verbs directly containing “merge” — these are related expressions about joining, combining, or integrating that native speakers often use instead.

  • come together → unite or join as one

    Example: “Different teams came together to finish the project.”

  • blend in → merge smoothly without standing out

    Example: “The design blends in with the surroundings.”

4. Example Sentences

  1. Two major airlines decided to merge last year

    → They joined into a single company.

  2. You must signal before you merge into traffic

    → You should join the flow safely.

  3. The river merges with the sea near the coast

    → The waters join together.

  4. Her personal and professional lives slowly merged

    → The boundaries between them disappeared.

  5. The update allows users to merge files easily

    → Digital content can be combined.

  6. Small traditions eventually merge into national culture

    → Customs become part of a larger identity.

  7. Their separate ideas slowly merged together into a solid presentation plan → Different thoughts blended into a unified concept.
  8. The discussion helped merge different opinions

    → Ideas were unified.

  9. As the road narrowed, cars had to merge into a single lane to continue safely → Multiple lanes blended into one traffic line.
  10. The highway lanes merge ahead

    → Traffic flows into one lane.

  11. The teams will merge after the reorganisation

    → Groups will become one unit.

  12. Technology and education continue to merge

    → The fields increasingly overlap.

5. Personal Examples

  1. Group projects help students merge different perspectives into one solution

    → Collaboration unifies ideas.

  2. As I improve my English, grammar and fluency begin to merge naturally

    → Skills start working together.

6. Register: Neutral / Formal

Native usage tips

  • Very common in business, traffic, technology, and abstract discussion
  • Sounds more organised and intentional than “mix”
  • The noun “merger” is especially common in business news

Similar expressions / words

  • combine → more general and flexible
  • integrate → more formal, systematic joining
  • blend → softer, more gradual merging