to mix smoothly and inseparably together: to blend the ingredients in a recipe.
2.
to mix (various sorts or grades) in order to obtain a particular kind or quality: Blend a little red paint with the blue paint.
3.
to prepare by such mixture: This tea is blended by mixing chamomile with pekoe.
4.
to pronounce (an utterance) as a combined sequence of sounds.
verb (used without object)
5.
to mix or intermingle smoothly and inseparably: I can't get the eggs and cream to blend.
6.
to fit or relate harmoniously; accord; go: The brown sofa did not blend with the purple wall.
7.
to have no perceptible separation: Sea and sky seemed to blend.
00:10
Un-blendedis always a great word to know.
So is interrobang. Does it mean:
So is ninnyhammer. Does it mean:
So is bezoar. Does it mean:
a fool or simpleton; ninny.
a printed punctuation mark (‽), available only in some typefaces, designed to combine the question mark (?) and the exclamation point (!), indicating a mixture of query and interjection, as after a rhetorical question.
a fool or simpleton; ninny.
a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc.
a stew of meat, vegetables, potatoes, etc.
a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison.
an act or manner of blending: tea of our own blend.
9.
a mixture or kind produced by blending: a special blend of rye and wheat flours.
10.
Linguistics. a word made by putting together parts of other words, as motel, made from motor and hotel, brunch, from breakfast and lunch, or guesstimate, from guess and estimate.
11.
a sequence of two or more consonant sounds within a syllable, as the bl in blend; consonant cluster.
Origin: 1250–1300;Middle Englishblenden,Old Englishblendan to mix, for blandan; cognate with Old Norseblanda,Old High Germanblantan to mix
Related forms
non·blend·ed, adjective
non·blend·ing, adjective, noun
re·blend, verb, re·blend·ed or re·blent, re·blend·ing.
(tr) to mix (different grades or varieties of tea, whisky, tobacco, etc) to produce a particular flavour, consistency, etc
3.
(intr) to look good together; harmonize
4.
(intr) (esp of colours) to shade imperceptibly into each other
—n
5.
a mixture or type produced by blending
6.
the act of blending
7.
Also called: portmanteau word a word formed by joining together the beginning and the end of two other words: "brunch" is a blend of "breakfast" and "lunch"
[Old English blandan; related to blendan to deceive, Old Norse blanda, Old High German blantan]
c.1300, in northern writers, from O.E. (Mercian) blondan or O.N. blanda "to mix," or a combination of both; perhaps from P.Gmc. *blandjan "to blind," via a connecting notion of "to make cloudy," from PIE base *bhel- (1) "to shine, flash, burn" (see bleach). Cf. Lith. blandus
"troubled, turbid, thick;" O.C.S. blesti "to go astray." Related: Blended.