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superimpose

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Etymology

From super- + impose.

Pronunciation

Verb

superimpose (third-person singular simple present superimposes, present participle superimposing, simple past and past participle superimposed)

  1. To place an object over another object, usually in such a way that both will be visible.
    Synonyms: overlay, superpose
    He superimposed the company logo over the image.
    • 2014 February 18, Alex Hern, “What is Doge?”, in The Guardian:
      It involves superimposing broken English written in multi-coloured Comic Sans on to pictures of shiba inus, a small Japanese breed of dog known for its spirited stubbornness.
    • 2017 May 16, Jerry Stuger, “Kafka and Autism. The Undisclosed Logic Behind Kafka’s Work”, in Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, volume 47, →DOI, pages 2336–2347:
      His protagonists all suffer from severe sense of guilt which cannot be explained from the actions and occurrences in the stories itself. What is happening in reality is that the sense of guilt is implied by the author and narrator. In fact Franz Kafka superimposes his autistic guilt onto the protagonists of his stories which has the effect that the causal mechanisms behind the guilt felt by the protagonists cannot be discerned from events within the story.
  2. (geology) To establish a structural system over, independently of underlying structures.

Translations

See also

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