Unite in a sentence as a verb

A way that believes that when you unite the core tools into one powerful process you can do cool things.

There's nothing a leader wants more than a highly visible enemy to unite his or her people.

Californians need to unite to vote Dianne Feinstein out of office.

There were more human planets than diaboli planets, but they were one united race, and were expanding faster than humans.

Ideological purity tests, references to communist witch hunts and a plea to unite?

No doubt Altmayer believes, Stock says, that humanity would unite in indignation and defeat the Diaboli, but Stock knows better.

Altmayer was refusing, feeling that humanity must unite, not remain divided.

People can and ought to be able to unite to form great companies without having to compare notes on how they voted in the last election or some similar matter having nothing whatever to do with whether someone can add value to the venture.

With the road of economic and political integration riddled with pot-holes of various sizes perhaps the new direction to unite everybody is personal freedom - freedom of movement, freedom of speech, etc. Europe certainly has the history to justify why these are laudable goals.

Unite definitions

verb

act in concert or unite in a common purpose or belief

See also: unify

verb

become one; "Germany unified officially in 1990"; "the cells merge"

See also: unify merge

verb

have or possess in combination; "she unites charm with a good business sense"

See also: combine

verb

be or become joined or united or linked; "The two streets connect to become a highway"; "Our paths joined"; "The travelers linked up again at the airport"

See also: connect link join

verb

bring together for a common purpose or action or ideology or in a shared situation; "the Democratic Patry platform united several splinter groups"

See also: unify

verb

join or combine; "We merged our resources"

See also: unify merge