join

verb
/ˈd͡ʒɔɪn/

Etymology

From Middle English joinen, joynen, joignen, from Old French joindre, juindre, jungre, from Latin iungō (“join, yoke”, verb), from Proto-Indo-European *yewg- (“to join, unite”). Cognate with Old English iucian, iugian, ġeocian, ġyċċan (“to join; yoke”). More at yoke.

  1. derived from *yewg- — “to join, unite
  2. derived from iungō — “join, yoke
  3. derived from joindre
  4. inherited from joinen

Definitions

  1. To connect or combine into one

    To connect or combine into one; to put together.

    • The plumber joined the two ends of the broken pipe.
    • We joined our efforts to get an even better result.
  2. To come together

    To come together; to meet.

    • Parallel lines never join.
    • These two rivers join in about 80 miles.
  3. To enter into association or alliance, to unite in a common purpose.

    • Forſake thy king and do but ioyne with me And we will triumph ouer al the world.
    • […]Nature and Fortune ioyn’d to make thee great.
  4. + 11 more definitions
    1. To come into the company of.

      • I will join you watching the football game as soon as I have finished my work.
      • No matter how early I came down, I would find him on the veranda, smoking cigarettes, or otherwise his man would be there with a message to say that his master would shortly join me if I would kindly wait.
    2. To become a member of.

      • Many children join a sports club.
      • Most politicians have joined a party.
      • In the autumn there was a row at some cement works about the unskilled labour men. A union had just been started for them and all but a few joined. One of these blacklegs was laid for by a picket and knocked out of time.
    3. To produce an intersection of data in two or more database tables.

      • By joining the Customer table on the Product table, we can show each customer's name alongside the products they have ordered.
    4. To unite in marriage.

      • Into the whiche holy eſtate theſe two perſones pꝛeſent: come nowe to be ioyned.
      • […]this fellow wil but ioyne you together, as they ioyne Wainscot, then one of you wil proue a ſhrunke pannell[…]
      • What therefore God hath ioyned together, let not man put aſunder.
    5. To enjoin upon

      To enjoin upon; to command.

      • And they ioyne them penaunce / as they call it / to faſt / to goo pylgremages ⁊ geve ſo moch to make ſatiſfaccion with all.
    6. To accept, or engage in, as a contest.

      • to join encounter, battle, or issue
      • Then when our powers in points of ſwords are ioin’d And cloſde in compaſſe of the killing bullet, […]
      • On the rough edge of battel ere it joyn'd.
    7. An act of joining or the state of being joined

      An act of joining or the state of being joined; a junction or joining.

      • We found 217 putative interchromosomal joins. Only one of these joins (in the paternal assembly of HG02080) was located in a euchromatic, non-acrocentric region and was manually confirmed to be a misassembly.
    8. An intersection of piping or wiring

      An intersection of piping or wiring; an interconnect.

    9. An intersection of data in two or more database tables.

    10. The act of joining something, such as a network.

      • The offline domain join is a three-step process described subsequently: […]
    11. The lowest upper bound, an operation between pairs of elements in a lattice, denoted by…

      The lowest upper bound, an operation between pairs of elements in a lattice, denoted by the symbol ∨.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

A definitional loop anchored at join. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.

01join02come03arrive04reach05thrust06lunge07attached08joined

A definitional loop anchored at join. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.

8 hops · closes at join

curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA