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[ UK /fjˈuːʒən/ ]
[ US /ˈfjuʒən/ ]
NOUN
  1. the combining of images from the two eyes to form a single visual percept
  2. the act of fusing (or melting) together
  3. correction of an unstable part of the spine by joining two or more vertebrae; usually done surgically but sometimes done by traction or immobilization
  4. the merging of adjacent sounds or syllables or words
  5. an occurrence that involves the production of a union
  6. a nuclear reaction in which nuclei combine to form more massive nuclei with the simultaneous release of energy
  7. the state of being combined into one body

How To Use fusion In A Sentence

  • Gwenhidwy likes to drink a lot, grain alcohol mostly, mixed in great strange mad-scientist concoctions with beef tea, grenadine, cough syrup, bitter belch-gathering infusions of blue scullcap, valerian root, motherwort and lady's-slipper, whatever's to hand really. Gravity's Rainbow
  • A good deal of role confusion and bewilderment as the growing child encounters the newer ways is to be expected and observed.
  • There is a good deal of confusion over the use of concepts to analyse the institutions and processes of policy-making.
  • Sampling of gases and vapors by active sampling on a solid adsorbent or passive sampling by diffusion is routinely done and well documented.
  • Omissions in my recent article must have caused confusion.
  • But decades of research have gone by and scientists remain incapable of creating a sustainable fusion reaction that could be used to create reliable power.
  • She was treated with intravenous folinic acid and antibiotics and was given transfusions of blood products.
  • Either switch to decaffeinated tea or coffee or herbal infusions like vervain, mint or camomile.
  • Here location at the two extremities of the peninsula has involved a striking difference in ethnic infusions in the two districts, different historical careers owing to different vicinal grouping, and dissimilar geographic conditions. Influences of Geographic Environment On the Basis of Ratzel's System of Anthropo-Geography
  • This led to some confusion about whether or not the men of the choir would intone the chant again.
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