concatenate

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English

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Etymology

From the perfect passive participle stem of (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Latin concatēnāre (to link or chain together), from con- (with) + catēnō (chain, bind), from catēna (a chain).

Pronunciation

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Verb

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  1. To join or link together, as though in a chain.
    • 2003, Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason, (Penguin 2004), page 182)
      Locke, by contrast, contended that [madness] was essentially a question of intellectual delusion, the capture of the mind by false ideas concatenated into a logical system of unreality.
  2. (transitive, computing) To join (text strings) together.
    Concatenating "shoe" with "string" yields "shoestring".

Derived terms

Translations

Adjective

concatenate (not comparable)

  1. (biology) Joined together as if in a chain.
    • 1947, Ivan Mackenzie Lamb, A monograph of the lichen genus Placopsis Nyl (page 166)
      The Nostocoid type consists of small rounded blue-green cells not over 5p. in diameter and arranged in chains which are often much broken up in the cephalodium, so that the concatenate arrangement is hardly apparent.

Italian

Verb

concatenate

  1. second-person plural present indicative of concatenare
  2. second-person plural imperative of concatenare
  3. feminine plural of concatenato

Latin

Verb

(deprecated template usage) concatēnāte

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of concatēnō