English

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Etymology

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mis- +‎ merge

Verb

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mismerge (third-person singular simple present mismerges, present participle mismerging, simple past and past participle mismerged)

  1. To merge incorrectly.
    • 1994, Majid Rabbani, Robert J. Safranek, Image and Video Compression, page 262:
      This merge criterion guarantees that regions whose properties have been drastically altered by previous merges are not mismerged on the basis of their original properties .
    • 2013, Makoto Nagao, Takashi Matsuyama, A Structural Analysis of Complex Aerial Photographs, page 162:
      Fig. 7.10 An irregular-shaped region with a "bottle-neck"; two regions R1 and R2 are mismerged into one elementary region.
    • 2013, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs. Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Protection, Making Sense of Consumer Credit Reports, page 100:
      Thus, they have been known to mismerge files when the consumers' names are similar and they share seven of nine digits in their SSN.

Noun

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mismerge (countable and uncountable, plural mismerges)

  1. The act or process of mismerging.
    • 2007, Jason Wall, Lisa J. Vollmer, What to Do with Your Psychology Or Sociology Degree, page 139:
      Spell-check also won't protect you against the famous "mismerge” that has sealed many a candidate's fate (you've described how your fastidious attention to detail will make you a valuable asset to Random House — in your cover letter to Scholastic).
    • 2007, United States. Congress. House Committee on Financial Services, Credit reports, page 63:
      Until that identifying segment is corrected or suppressed, or unless the CRA manually edits the file, the mismerge will continue and likely become worse.
    • 2016, Jakub Narebski, Mastering Git, page 217:
      Sometimes, mismerges occur due to unimportant matching lines (for example, braces from distinct functions).

Anagrams

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