different between merge vs rollup
merge
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin merg? (“to dip; dip in; plunge; sink down into; immerse; overwhelm”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /m??d?/
- (US) IPA(key): /m?d?/
- Rhymes: -??(?)d?
Verb
merge (third-person singular simple present merges, present participle merging, simple past and past participle merged)
- (transitive) To combine into a whole.
- Headquarters merged the operations of the three divisions.
- 1791, Edmund Burke, letter to a member of the National Assembly
- to merge all natural and all social sentiment in inordinate vanity
- 1834, Thomas de Quincey, Samuel Taylor Coleridge (first published in Tait's Edinburgh Magazine)
- Whig and Tory were merged and swallowed up in the transcendent duties of patriots.
- (intransitive) To combine into a whole.
- The two companies merged.
- To blend gradually into something else.
- The lanes of traffic merged.
Synonyms
- See synonyms at Thesaurus:coalesce.
Antonyms
- divide
- split
Derived terms
- merger
- mergeable
- mergeability
Related terms
- annex
Translations
Noun
merge (plural merges)
- The joining together of multiple sources.
- There are often accidents at that traffic merge.
- The merge of the two documents failed.
Translations
Anagrams
- emerg
Italian
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?rd?e
Verb
merge
- third-person singular present indicative of mergere
Anagrams
- germe
Latin
Verb
merge
- second-person singular present active imperative of merg?
Romanian
Alternative forms
- mere (regional, Transylvania)
Etymology
From Latin mergere, present active infinitive of merg? (itself ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *mesg- (“to plunge, dip”)), with a unique sense developing in Balkanic or Eastern Romance. Compare Aromanian njergu, njeardziri; cf. also Albanian mërgoj (“to move away”) and Sardinian imbergere (“to push”). There may have been an intermediate sense of "to fall" in earlier Romanian.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?mer.d??e/
Verb
a merge (third-person singular present merge, past participle mers) 3rd conj.
- to go
- to walk
Conjugation
Derived terms
- mergere
- mers
See also
- duce
- umbla
- mi?ca
- deplasa
References
merge From the web:
- what merged with native cultures on the indian
- what merge means
- what merger means
- what mergers are happening
- what merger
- what merger and acquisition
- what merge sort
- what merge columns in a table
rollup
English
Alternative forms
- roll-up
- roll up
Etymology
From the verb phrase roll up.
Noun
rollup (plural rollups)
- A kind of food made by wrapping ingredients in another food, e.g. fajitas.
- She ate a chicken rollup and a salad.
- A kind of flat, pectin-based, fruit-flavored snack rolled into a tube.
- A self-made cigarette of tobacco and rolling paper.
- Synonym: rollie
- I smoke rollups because they are cheaper than buying cigarettes.
- A business technique where multiple small companies in the same market are acquired and merged.
- (computing) A collection of software updates distributed as a single package.
- 2014, Michel de Rooij, Jaap Wesselius, Pro Exchange 2013 SP1 PowerShell Administration
- Between issuance of service packs, Microsoft released update rollups for Exchange Server on a regular basis […]
- 2014, Michel de Rooij, Jaap Wesselius, Pro Exchange 2013 SP1 PowerShell Administration
- That which is rolled up; a summation; an aggregation; a total.
Translations
Anagrams
- uproll
rollup From the web:
- what is rollup in sql
- what is rollup in unroll me
- what is rollup summary in salesforce
- what does rollup mean on unroll me
- what is rollup summary field in salesforce
- what is rollup js
- what does rollup mean
- what is rollup in data warehouse
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