Cincinnati, Ohio Chicago, Ill.: American Book Company Oxford: Clarendon Press. “ fuse”, in Charlton T Lewis Charles Short (1879) A New Latin Dictionary, New York, N.Y.2 to combine different qualities, ideas, or things, or to be combined SYN merge Their music fuses elements as diverse as. third-person singular past historic of fondereįūsē ( comparative fūsius, superlative fūsissimē) fuse2 verb intransitive, transitive 1 to join together physically, or to make things join together, and become a single thing fuse (something) together The egg and sperm fuse together as one cell.first / third-person singular present indicative / subjunctive.( transitive ) To melt together to blend to mix indistinguishably.
it fuses very easily at a temperature of 97°, and distils at a bright red heat (742°.) The Fuse is made up of a material which has high resistivity and low melting point, so that it melts down due to overheating of the wire during high current flow. 1891, Dmitri Mendeleev, The Principles of Chemistry (1905) 3rd edition, Vol.( transitive ) To liquify by heat melt.Russian: пла́вкий предохрани́тель m ( plávkij predoxranítelʹ ), про́бка (ru) f ( próbka ) ( colloquial )įuse ( third-person singular simple present fuses, present participle fusing, simple past and past participle fused).The fuse is made up of thin strip or strand of metal, whenever the heavy amount of current or an excessive current flow is there in an electrical circuit, the fuse melts and it. Hungarian: biztosíték (hu), olvadóbiztosítóīokmål: sikring (no) m Nynorsk: sikring f or m Fuses are the protectors, these are the safety devices which are used to protect the home appliances like televisions, refrigerators, computers with damage by high voltage.