verb (used with object),in·te·grat·ed,in·te·grat·ing.
to bring together or incorporate (parts) into a whole.
to make up, combine, or complete to produce a whole or a larger unit, as parts do.
to unite or combine.
to give or cause to give equal opportunity and consideration to (a racial, religious, or ethnic group or a member of such a group): to integrate minority groups in the school system.
to combine (previously segregated educational facilities, classes, and the like) into one unified system; desegregate.
to give or cause to give members of all racial, religious, and ethnic groups an equal opportunity to belong to, be employed by, be customers of, or vote in (an organization, place of business, city, state, etc.): to integrate a restaurant; to integrate a country club.
Mathematics. to find the value of the integral of (a function).
to indicate the total amount or the mean value of.
verb (used without object),in·te·grat·ed,in·te·grat·ing.
to become integrated.
to meld with and become part of the dominant culture.
Mathematics.
to perform the operation of integration, or finding the integral of a function or equation.
to find the solution to a differential equation.
Origin of integrate
First recorded in 1630–40; from Latin integrātus, past participle of integrāre “to renew, restore”; see integer, -ate1
integralism, integral test, integrand, integrant, integraph, integrate, integrated, integrated bar, integrated circuit, integrated data processing, integrated development environment