Do we say blend or blende

blend 366 occurrences

I speak, but my complaint no influence leaves Upon their hearts; with mine no feelings blend; With me in anger they, and fierce disdain contend.

The blend brought him one day to Portsmouth, where the Victory lies, with the honourable purpose of painting a picture of that famous ship with NELSON on board.

How Snowdrops cold, and blue-eyed Harebels blend

confundir, to confuse, confound, mingle, unite; refl., to lose form (or substance); to blend, be confused (confounded or mingled); to mingle, intermingle, vanish, be lost, be lost to sight (en, in).

"The two souls that blend togetherFlesh of my fleshIncrease and multiply" In my opinion he had much better have got to work like a notary: "Before us, there has been drawn up a deed of arrangement regarding Messrs. Ephrinell, Bluett & Co." My thought remained unfinished.

To those who have not met him, it may appear paradoxical to say that his tastes were at the same moment acutely fastidious and widely sympathetic; but anyone who has talked with him will recall the blend of high impersonal ideas with a remarkable personality which seldom failed to stimulate other mindseven if those others shared few if any of his intellectual tastes.

If it be real, instead of attempting to blend incompatible things, let us at once take a friendly leave of each other.

And the wonderful moment came and went; the moment when two flames leap into one fire; when two lives dashing upon each other blend into one wonderful torrent.

"They seek to blend with something they feel instinctively to be good for them, helpful to their essential beings, encouraging to their best expressiontheir life.

It might merge and blend with ours under certain conditions, so that we could understand it by being it, for a time at least.

Therefore the women in the lingerie, negligée, millinery, dress, suit and corset sections were requested to wear during opening week a modest but modish black one-piece gown that would blend with the air of elegance which those departments were to maintain.

But although the tower and spire are of a later periodthe Decorated, they blend so harmoniously with the earlier building that all might have arisen in one twelve months instead of being labours spread over one hundred years.

No fitting place" "No fitting place" to meet thy "noble friend," Where "heart with heart" and "mind with mind" might blend?

All these things seemed to blend together into something so solemn

We blend in our blood, everyone of us, and we blend in our ideas and purposes, craftsmen, warriors, savages, peasants, and a score of races, and an endless multitude of social expedients and rules. Go back but a hundred generations in the lineage of the most delicate girl you know, and you will find a dozen murderers.

We blend in our blood, everyone of us, and we blend in our ideas and purposes, craftsmen, warriors, savages, peasants, and a score of races, and an endless multitude of social expedients and rules. Go back but a hundred generations in the lineage of the most delicate girl you know, and you will find a dozen murderers.

Yes,and thy minstrel art the while, Can blend the tones of weal and we, So archly, that the heart may smile, Though bright, unbidden tear-drops flow.

The panther's wail, the owlet's scream, The whippoorwill's complaining song, Blend with the cataract's solemn theme, And the wild cadences prolong.

I find by taking two ordinary carre-de-visite photos of two different persons' faces, the portraits being about the same sizes, and looking about the same direction, and placing them in a stereoscope, the faces blend into one in a most remarkable manner, producing in the case of some ladies' portraits, in every instance, a decided improvement in beauty.

The pictures were not taken in a binocular camera, and therefore do not stand out well, but by moving one or both until the eyes coincide in the stereoscope the pictures blend perfectly.

"Yet they are of so similar a nature as readily to mix and blend.

Furetière is said to have bowed for a moment beneath the storm, offering to blend his work in the general Dictionary of the Academy, or to remove from it all words not admitted to deal technically with art and science.

The voluminous chords of the wedding march done in mad syncopation issued in a delirious blend from the saxophones and trombonesand the march began.

These movements should blend one into the other, and should be executed without any affectation.

Was it for this That one, the fairest of all rivers, [V] loved 270 To blend his murmurs with my nurse's song, And, from his alder shades and rocky falls, And from his fords and shallows, sent a voice That flowed along my dreams?

blende 5 occurrences

The Humboldt is a narrow fissure carrying a thin ore streak of high grade, consisting of sulphides of silver, antimony, arsenic, and copper; the Bassick is a great conglomerate vein containing tellurides of silver and gold, argentiferous galena, blende, and yellow copper; the Bull Domingo is also a great fissure filled with rubbish containing ore chimneys of galena with tufts of wire silver.

The deposition of galena, blende, and pyrite in the Galena lead mines still continues.

[Footnote B: "Chaucer's text is: 'And therwithalle his meynye for to blende A cause he fonde in toune for to go.' 'His meynye for to blende,' i. e. to keep his household or his domestics in the dark.

[Footnote B: "Chaucer's text is: 'And therwithalle his meynye for to blende A cause he fonde in toune for to go.' 'His meynye for to blende,' i. e. to keep his household or his domestics in the dark.

INDICTION, a cycle of 15 years instituted by Constantine the Great, and which began on the 24th September 812, the day of his victory over Maxentius; to find the indiction of any year add 1 and divide by 15. INDIUM, a metallic elementary body of rare occurrence, and first discovered in zinc-blende in 1863.

Do we say   blend   or  blende