conjoin
Definitions
verb
To join together; to unite; to combine.
They are representatives that will loosely conjoin a nation.
During an ongoing pandemic conjoined with an intensifying operational crisis inside U.S. prisons, mass clemency should be the first step of many toward a decarceral agenda that could still––if he’s bold enough to seize the opportunity––define Biden’s presidency.
To marry.
I will conjoin you in holy matrimony.
To join as coordinate elements, often with a coordinating conjunction, such as coordinate clauses.
To combine two sets, conditions, or expressions by a logical AND; to intersect.
To unite, to join, to league.
Our armie will be forty thouſand ſtrong, When Tamburlain and braue Theridamas Haue met vs by the riuer Araris: And all conioin’d to meete the witleſſe King, That now is marching neere to Parthia.
And the Body of one Dead; — a temple where the Hero-soul once was and now is not: Oh, all mystery, all pity, all mute awe and wonder; Supernaturalism brought home to the very dullest; Eternity laid open, and the nether Darkness and the upper Light-Kingdoms; — do conjoin there, or exist nowhere!
noun
One of the words or phrases that are coordinated by a conjunction.
Et is the general coordinator that can be used for all types of coordination, both clauses and constituents, regardless of the semantic relation between the conjoins.
A reassembled bone, stone or ceramic artifact.
Attention must also be given to understanding why certain sites yield a low number of conjoins.