colligate

VERB
  1. consider (an instance of something) as part of a general rule or principle
  2. make a logical or causal connection
    colligate these facts
    I cannot connect these two pieces of evidence in my mind
    I cannot relate these events at all
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How To Use colligate In A Sentence

  • Conclusion Carrying out colligate prevention and cure step, basing continuance mechanism of prevention and cure of IDD are manipulable to keep eliminating IDD for long-term in a larger district.
  • The bionics is a subject of a colligated frontier study.
  • In other cases (no doubt) instead of collecting the conception from the very phenomena which we are attempting to colligate, we select it from among those which have been previously collected by abstraction from other facts. A System Of Logic, Ratiocinative And Inductive (Vol. 1 of 2)
  • At the opposite end of the colligate scale, only a few doors away, is Harlem's answer to a happening high-priced $100-per-person dining experience, the Hudson River Café, where you may dine upstairs or down, inside or out. Michael Henry Adams: Touring Harlem, Lost and Found
  • Here's how to find the perfect colligate bag to hold your phone, makeup, and oh yeah, your textbooks. The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
  • Conclusion Carrying out colligate prevention and cure step, basing continuance mechanism of prevention and cure of IDD are manipulable to keep eliminating IDD for long-term in a larger district.
  • According to others, it signifies the “colligated,” i.e. by mountains. Personal Narrative of a Pilgrimage to Al-Madinah and Meccah
  • However, selecting the appropriate conception with which to colligate the data is not conjectural (1858b, p. 78). William Whewell
  • When Newton extended his theory regarding an inverse-square attractive force, which colligated facts of planetary motion and lunar motion, to the class of William Whewell
  • Typically, finding the appropriate conception with which to colligate a class of phenomena requires a series of inferences, thus Whewell noted that discoverers's induction is a process involving a “train of researches” William Whewell
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