Amalgamate in a sentence as a verb

If an unborn child is a "cells amalgamate" then maybe you are too.

I have interest in CS and Maths but no clue on how these two fields amalgamate and what pathways from Frontend lead to them?

Ideally, the government would step in at this point and amalgamate the knowledge into a standard we could point to.

May be, the search engines can get smart enough to amalgamate a page on the searched topic given the amount of open-web they crawl?

It does make me wonder what happens when a page changes its outlinks a lot, does pagerank get distributed along the last snapshot or does it amalgamate them.

Amalgamate in a sentence as an adjective

I believe that some budgeting / spending-tracking apps also take advantage of it to amalgamate information from all of your accounts.

He says he encrypted the files, then erased the encryption software, the tarball and the bash history — which is basically a back up of the Unix commands used to amalgamate and transfer the files.

Is there a good counter to this observation?Even if we start with your premise, that it's only the person's brain, the brain itself is an amalgamate of many, many other things, very few we have direct responsibility for.

Our subjective experience that we call consciousness might be an amalgamate of very different things happening at the brain level and a single definition might just not do. Meanwhile the operational definitions like the ones I mentioned allow us to make useful predictions and draw conclusions, for example that the brain activity that happens when we experience states most people would describe as consciousness also happens in certain animals.

What crazy piece of infrastructure might we require for this kind of gradual distributed upgrade?This almost certainly sounds crazy to most engineers, but at the organisation I work they build quite a lot of App Store style applications which amalgamate 100s of other applications into one gigantic application.

Amalgamate definitions

verb

to bring or combine together or with something else; "resourcefully he mingled music and dance"

See also: mingle commix unify

adjective

joined together into a whole; "United Industries"; "the amalgamated colleges constituted a university"; "a consolidated school"

See also: amalgamated coalesced consolidated fused