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unify
/ ˈːɪˌڲɪ /
verb
- to make or become one; unite
Derived Forms
- ˈܲԾˌھ, noun
- ˈܲԾˌھ, adjective
Other Word Forms
- ·Ծ·ھ· noun
- ԴDz··Ծ·ھ adjective
- ܲ·-·Ծ·ھ adjective
- ··Ծ·ڲ verb (used with object) reunified reunifying
- ܲ··Ծ·ھ adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of unify1
Example Sentences
Certainly, the band's gleeful celebration of drug culture puts them at odds with the old guard of the movement - but the band are serious about their desire for a unified Ireland.
However, public health experts have been unified in telling the BBC that no parent should feel guilty for using the products.
The victory of the communist regime over the U.S. allied armies in the south effectively ended a costly, three decades-long conflict and unified the country.
Democrats have struggled to land a unified message in President Donald Trump's first months in office, with fractures both in Congress and among supporters.
Texas state lawmakers have united around two, bipartisan bills that seek to clarify the exceptions to the state's strict abortion ban and unify it's scattershot abortion laws.
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