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ConcatenateTo link together in a chain or in a series. For example, the lymph nodes that appeared enlarged were concatenated, in a row like the links of a chain. The word "concatenate" comes from the Latin "concatenare" which was formed from "com-" meaning "with or together" and "catena" meaning "chain.&q [..]
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Concatenatec. 1600, from Late Latin concatenatus, past participle of concatenare "to link together" (see concatenation). Related: Concatenated; concatenating.
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ConcatenateInternet Glossary To link together or join. For example, concatenating the three words in, as, and much yields the single word inasmuch. Computer manuals often refer to the process of concatenating strings, a string being any series of characters. You can also concatenate files by appending one to another.
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ConcatenateTo link together or join. For example, concatenating the three words in, as, and much yields the single word inasmuch. Computer manuals often refer to the process of concatenating strings, a string be [..]
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ConcatenateFrom the Latin con ("together") and catenare ("to chain"). To join two or more data fields within a record to create a single field. In a more general sense, to link items together [..]
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Concatenate(v) combine two strings to form a single one(v) add by linking or joining so as to form a chain or series
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ConcatenateA business rule function for the Expression Builder which takes two text values and combines them together. For example, if one field has the value "shop", and another field has the value "ping", then a function CONCATENATE("shop", "ping") would result in a new value of "shopping".
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Concatenate
To join or link together, as though in a chain.
* '''2003''', Roy Porter, ''Flesh in the Age of Reason'', (Penguin 2004), page 182)
*: Locke, by contrast, contended that [madness] was essentially [..]
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