conflated
adjective
con·flat·ed
kən-ˈflā-təd
1
: made up of a combination of different elements
… Isabelle's conflated role of wife, mother and photojournalist …—UWIRE Text
The haruspices represent the Etruscan tradition in official Roman religion, and it is extremely interesting to find one in so distant a province as Britain, honouring a conflated Romano-Celtic deity.—Peter Salway
2
: confused with another or with each other : not properly differentiated
… in our society, where love and sexual desire are so conflated …—Olivia Fane
The problem occurs when the idea of eating healthy and the decision to diet often become conflated.—The Moulton (Alabama) Advertiser
However, the Department of Health accused the royal college of using partial and conflated data, confusing the number of people and consultations.—Rowena Mason
There are so many misspellings, factual errors, conflated memories and faulty assumptions that the sum effect will likely prove only annoying …—George Kimball
… political objections arise about who is doing anthropological research for whom—especially when it's for the government, corporations, or the rich and powerful. "Ethics becomes conflated with politics in ways that I find profoundly distressing," she [Laura A. McNamara] said.—Dan Berrett
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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