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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 28, 2015 is:
colligate \KAH-luh-gayt\ verb
1 : to bind, unite, or group together
2 : to subsume (isolated facts) under a general concept
3 : to be or become a member of a group or unit
Examples:
"For instance, many words colligate with the word 'the,' which is a grammatical marker of definiteness rather than a word that carries significant semantic content." — Tony McEnery and Andrew Hardie, Corpus Linguistics: Method, Theory and Practice, 2012
"Research that examines the combined effect of lifestyle factors on mortality is plentiful, and data have been colligated in a recent meta-analysis." — Valentina A. Andreeva et al., The American Journal of Public Health, November 2014
Did you know?
Colligate (not to be confused with collocate or collegiate) is a technical term that descends from Latin colligare, itself from com- ("with") plus ligare ("to tie"). Which of the following words is NOT tied to ligare?
ligature, ligament, lien, rely, ally, collogue, oblige, furl, league
Ligature, ligament, lien, rely, ally, oblige, furl, and league (in the sense of "an association of persons, groups, or teams") can all be traced back along varying paths to ligare. That leaves only collogue (meaning "to confer")—whose origin is unknown. (Collocate and collegiate are also unrelated via ligare.)
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Topics
languagedictionarywordsword a daywordvocabularymerriamenglishwebstermerriam-websterword of the day