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merga
You can use "merge" in a sentence like this: "The two companies decided to merge in order to create a stronger presence in the market."
The Douglas Plane Company did merge with Boeing to create the world's largest aerospace company.
Merge it in MS Word and save it. or Combine it using MS Paint.
•mergeapon •mergent
What you have is a situation where the correct wording - the one that you want to create - is already an alternate to anotherquestion.You will get a message something like this:"Others have said that '[your question]' is the same as [the question that it is an alternate of]. Is this correct?"Merge - Yes, and merge the original questionSplit - No, these are different questions.Since your wording is trapped inside that "wrong" question, you want to choose "Split." Now, the question you are working on will become an alternate to the correctly spelled version you were trying to create in the first place.
The Mail Merge Wizard is a step by step process to create mail merges.
Antonyms. "Merge" means to combine or unite, while "separate" means to divide or disconnect.
Absolutely - create a 'form letter' in the word processor, using the Mail merge tool - and select the database you want as the address list.
Each of the individual programs within the suite are designed to work together. For example, you could create a standard letter with the word-processor, and merge it with a list of addresses in the database to create a mail-merge document for sending to a list of customers. OR - you could again create a standard letter, and merge it with data from a spreadsheet to send reminder letters for overdue payments. These are just two examples of many !
No, but a text-editor program does.
Cars in the REAR on an On Ramp should NOT try to merge into moving traffic BEFORE the cars in front have merged into the traffic flow. The moving traffic has first right of way, and the first car entering a highway from an On Ramp has right of way BEFORE all other cars who are also entering the highway from the On Ramp. When motorists from behind try to enter a highway before motorists in front, the motorists from behind create additional obstacles to the first car trying to merge into existing traffic. Each driver on the On Ramp MUST wait his / her turn to merge into traffic, without obstructing another driver at the front of the line.