See Also: conflate(1)(dictionary)
conflate(2)(dictionary)
conflate(dictionary)

conflate(2) (iou)



conflate verb trans. LME.
[Latin conflat- pa. ppl stem of conflare kindle, achieve, fuse, formed as CON- + flare blow.]
Fuse, melt down (metal). LME-M17.
Put together; compose; bring about. E17.
D. Piper Attempts..to conflate an ideal poet, with Pope's image dominant.
Combine, blend (two things, esp. two variant texts etc.) into one. L19.
A. H. McNeile The custom of the former [Matthew] was to conflate the language of his sources when they overlapped.