Converge
volume
British pronunciation/kənvˈɜːd‍ʒ/
American pronunciation/kənˈvɝdʒ/

Definition & Meaning of "converge"

to converge
01

move or draw together at a certain location

Intransitive: to converge somewhere
to converge definition and meaning
example
Example
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The parade spectators began to converge on the main square to witness the festivities.
Commuters converged at the train station during rush hour, eager to board their respective trains.
02

(of roads, paths, lines, etc.) to lead toward a point that connects them

Intransitive: to converge somewhere
example
Example
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The two highways converge at the city center.
The hiking trails converge near the mountain peak.
03

to combine or merge to create a unified or cohesive result

Intransitive
Transitive: to converge two or more similar things
example
Example
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In filmmaking, the director 's vision and the cinematographer 's expertise converge to produce a visually stunning movie.
The interdisciplinary research project sought to converge insights from various fields to address complex societal challenges.
04

(of policies, opinions, ideas, aims, etc.) to develop into either the same thing or something extremely similar

Intransitive
example
Example
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Through diplomatic negotiations, the countries ' foreign policies began to converge.
Over time, the committee members ' opinions started to converge on a common strategy for the upcoming project.
05

to approach a specific value called the limit as the number of terms increases

Intransitive: to converge | to converge to a value
example
Example
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As x approaches 0, the function sin(x)/x converges to 1.
As the function was evaluated at smaller and smaller intervals, its output seemed to converge to a specific point.
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