blend
31blend — [[t]blɛnd[/t]] v. t. 1) to mix smoothly and inseparably 2) to prepare by mixing various sorts or grades: I blend this tea by mixing chamomile with pekoe[/ex] 3) to intermingle smoothly and inseparably 4) to fit or relate harmoniously: The voices… …
32blend — 1 verb 1 (T) to thoroughly mix together soft or liquid substances to form a single smooth substance: Blend the sugar, eggs, and flour. 2 (I, T) to combine different features or characteristics in a way that produces an effective or pleasant… …
33blend — 1. verb 1) blend the ingredients until smooth Syn: mix, mingle, combine, merge, fuse, meld, coalesce, integrate, intermix; stir, whisk, fold in; technical admix; literary commingle 2) the new buildings blend with the older ones …
34blend — 1. verb 1) blend the ingredients until smooth Syn: mix, mingle, combine, merge, amalgamate, stir, whisk, fold in 2) the new buildings blend with the older ones Syn: harmonize, go (well) …
35blend — /blɛnd / (say blend) verb (t) 1. to mix smoothly and inseparably together. 2. to mix (various sorts or grades) in order to obtain a particular kind or quality. 3. to prepare by such mixture. 4. to prepare (food) using a blender. –verb (i) 5. to… …
36Blend — Blẹnd 〈m. 6 oder n. 15〉 1. Verschnitt, Mischung aus verschiedenen Sorten (von Tee, Tabak u. a.) (Blended Whiskey) 2. 〈Sprachw.〉 aus der absichtlichen Verschmelzung zweier Wörter hervorgehender neuer Ausdruck, z. B. “Medizyniker„ aus “Mediziner„… …
37blend — [13] Old English had a verb blendan, but it meant ‘make blind’ or ‘dazzle’. Modern English blend appears to come from blend , the present stem of Old Norse blanda ‘mix’ (a relative of Old English blandan ‘mix’). The ultimate source of this is not …
38blend — riebalų mišinys statusas Aprobuotas sritis maistas apibrėžtis Iš kietų ir (arba) skystų augalinių ir (arba) gyvūninių riebalų gautas maisto gaminys, kuriame riebalų yra ne mažiau kaip 80 proc., bet mažiau kaip 90 proc. atitikmenys: angl. blend;… …
39blend — [13] Old English had a verb blendan, but it meant ‘make blind’ or ‘dazzle’. Modern English blend appears to come from blend , the present stem of Old Norse blanda ‘mix’ (a relative of Old English blandan ‘mix’). The ultimate source of this is not …
40blend — I. verb (blended; also blent; blending) Etymology: Middle English, probably from Old Norse blend , present stem of blanda to mix; akin to Old English blandan to mix, Lithuanian blandus impure, cloudy Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. mix;… …