Sentences with conflate
con·flate
C c - Her letters conflate past and present. [VERB noun]
- To conflate dissenting voices into one protest.
- As John Egan's parents self-destruct, his peculiar sensitivities begin to warp and conflate under the emotional pressure.
- There are lots of paths to self-discovery, but most of them don't conflate so many lucrative book markets in one handy volume.
- He doesn't find people at large too hard on politicians, although voters do tend to conflate federal.
- See how marketing strategists are attempting to conflate the Anzac spirit at Gallipoli with the fighting spirit on the football ground.