conflate
English
WOTD – 5 May 2008
Etymology
Attested since 1541[1]: from Latin cōnflātus, past passive participle of cōnflō (“fuse, kindle, blow together”), see -ate (verb-forming suffix).
Pronunciation
Verb
conflate (third-person singular simple present conflates, present participle conflating, simple past and past participle conflated)
- To combine or mix together.
- (by extension) To fail to properly distinguish or keep separate (things); to mistakenly treat (them) as equivalent.
- Synonyms: confuse, mix up, lump together
- “Bacon was Lord Chancellor of England and the first European to experiment with gunpowder.” — “No, you are conflating Francis Bacon and Roger Bacon.”
- (by extension) To deliberately draw a false equivalence or association, typically in a tacit or implicit manner as propaganda and/or an intentional distortion or misrepresentation of the subject matter.
- 2020 September 15, Brandon Miller and Judson Jones, “Climate is not weather: Trump continues to get the two conflated”, in CNN[3]:
- Climate skeptics have conflated the two for years, for example, pointing to cold winter weather as proof that global warming is a hoax, most likely to play on people’s confusion about the two.
Derived terms
Translations
to fuse into a single entity
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to mix together different elements
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to fail to properly distinguish things or keep them separate; mistakenly treat them as equivalent
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Adjective
conflate (not comparable)
- (biblical criticism) Combining elements from multiple versions of the same text.
- 1999, Emanuel Tov, The Greek and Hebrew Bible: Collected Essays on the Septuagint:
- Why the redactor created this conflate version, despite its inconsistencies, is a matter of conjecture.
Noun
conflate (plural conflates)
- (biblical criticism) A conflate text, one which conflates multiple version of a text together.
References
- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2025) “conflate”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
cōnflāte
- second-person plural present active imperative of cōnflō