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kombinier

Kombinier is the stem form used in German for the verb kombinieren, meaning to combine, merge, or join together. It is not used as a standalone infinitive in everyday language; the full verb appears as kombinieren, with standard conjugation: ich kombiniere, du kombinierst, er/sie/es kombiniert, wir kombinieren, ihr kombiniert, Sie kombinieren. The past participle is kombiniert, and the present participle is kombinierend. The stem Kombinier- is encountered mainly in dictionaries, linguistic descriptions, and compound formations such as in text about the verb’s morphology.

Etymology and related terms: the verb kombinieren comes from the Latin combinare, meaning to join together,

Usage and contexts: kombinieren is widely used across domains such as daily language, science, and technology.

See also: Kombination, Kombinatorik, kombinieren.

via
shared
roots
with
other
European
languages.
In
German,
the
prefix
con-
is
represented
as
com-
in
historical
forms,
and
binare
refers
to
joining
or
binding
two
or
more
items.
The
noun
form
die
Kombination
denotes
a
specific
instance
of
combining,
while
die
Kombinatorik
is
the
branch
of
mathematics
that
studies
counting
methods
for
arrangements
and
selections.
The
related
noun
die
Kombination
can
denote
a
set
of
items
brought
together
for
a
particular
purpose,
or
an
arrangement
of
elements.
Examples
include
“Zwei
Zutaten
kombinieren”
(to
combine
two
ingredients),
“verschiedene
Methoden
kombinieren”
(to
combine
different
methods),
or
“eine
Out
Fit
kombinieren”
(to
assemble
an
outfit).
In
mathematics
and
logic,
words
like
Kombination
and
Kombinatorik
refer
to
concepts
of
selecting
and
arranging
items,
sometimes
leading
to
domain-specific
terminology
in
programming,
statistics,
and
operations
research.