How to Use converge in a Sentence
converge
verb- The two roads converge in the center of town.
- Economic forces converged to bring the country out of a recession.
- Students converged in the parking lot to say goodbye after graduation.
- Many companies are combining rapidly converging communication technology into one device that can act as a phone, take photographs, and send e-mail.
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People from all around the city would converge on the island to play.
— Matthew Vantryon, The Indianapolis Star, 26 May 2022 -
With the rise of ransomware, those three things often converge.
— Tony Bradley, Forbes, 19 May 2022 -
Free of weighty toppings, the crust becomes an extra snappy stage for the cheesy and sodium-packed toppings to converge.
— Cesar Hernandez, San Francisco Chronicle, 31 May 2022 -
Having one in a lifetime is a blessing, having two is a utopia that only happens when all things converge precisely at the right time.
— Steve Meyer, Anchorage Daily News, 11 June 2022 -
Raleigh is a city where opposites delightfully converge.
— Bon Appétit, 25 May 2022 -
But Howard has long been referred to as the Mecca, a place where Black achievement, community, and culture converge.
— Jazmine Hughes, The New Yorker, 21 Oct. 2024 -
This partnership with Adar realizes our vision and marks a new era where cinema, streaming, and global content converge.
— Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 21 Oct. 2024 -
In pairs trading, a trader may bet that this divergence is temporary and that the prices will converge again; this is frequently a short-term bet based on correlations and price behavior.
— Michael Khouw, CNBC, 24 Oct. 2024 -
Thousands are expected to converge on the small Pennsylvania town this summer for a three-day event celebrating Ness’s career.
— Samantha Drake, Washington Post, 1 June 2022 -
The mega power of these turbo-twins acting together can completely overhaul the traditional value chain and converge industries.
— Rachel Ooi, Forbes, 8 June 2022 -
Under Nash’s theorem, producers will observe each other’s behavior and be smart enough to coalesce or converge to make higher profits.
— Ed Hirs, Forbes, 5 May 2022 -
Find Edges and Transition Areas Joy uses digital maps to identify areas where two or three types of habitat converge.
— Alex Robinson, Outdoor Life, 16 Oct. 2024 -
The daughter and the students converge in the figure of the girl.
— Merve Emre, The New Yorker, 11 July 2023 -
The Cubs had four players converge at the same spot in the outfield.
— Charlie Goldsmith, The Enquirer, 1 July 2022 -
But at the end of the day, the region itself does not want to converge to its neighbors, to the north.
— CBS News, 22 June 2022 -
King’s words echoed through speakers across the grounds of the park before the peace walk was to converge with the march.
— Ellie Silverman, Washington Post, 16 Jan. 2023 -
At the end of each day, the reprogrammed drones/bees form a lethal swarm to converge on and kill the person at the top of the list.
— Mark Bowden, The Atlantic, 22 Nov. 2022 -
Images show the once bustling street barren as dark smoke converged over the town.
— Caitlin O'Kane, CBS News, 10 Aug. 2023 -
The two teams need to converge, but this is a slow-going effort.
— Patrick Ostiguy, Forbes, 11 Oct. 2022 -
Those scouts converging on Bellarmine are proof to the point.
— The Arizona Republic, 28 Apr. 2023 -
The only realms where races converge, Joseph said, are sports and music.
— Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker, 6 Feb. 2023 -
The fates of the protagonists converge in one race, the treacherous 1,000-mile race across Italy, the Mille Miglia.
— Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 15 Aug. 2023 -
The loves of their life converged in a dusty stairwell outside Pauley Pavilion.
— Ben Bolch, Los Angeles Times, 7 Mar. 2024 -
The converging crises in recent years have put the world economy on track for the weakest half-decade in 30 years.
— Alan Rappeport, New York Times, 9 Jan. 2024 -
Music lovers, young and old, have converged from all over the globe to this corner of Mississippi to hear the blues in the place it was born.
— Tara Massouleh McCay, Southern Living, 6 Mar. 2024 -
These forces are all converging and leading to very large numbers of people on the move.
— Sarah Matusek, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 Oct. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'converge.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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