blent: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Rare / Archaic
UK/blɛnt/US/blɛnt/

Literary, Poetic, Archaic. Not used in contemporary, neutral prose.

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Quick answer

What does “blent” mean?

A past tense and past participle form of 'blend', meaning to mix or combine two or more things, typically so that the constituents become indistinguishable.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A past tense and past participle form of 'blend', meaning to mix or combine two or more things, typically so that the constituents become indistinguishable.

As a poetic, archaic or literary form, it often suggests a seamless, harmonious union, sometimes beyond the physical, hinting at emotional, spiritual, or sensory integration.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

The form is equally archaic in both varieties. British English might have slightly more historical literary occurrences, but it is not a living feature of either dialect.

Connotations

Evokes 19th-century or earlier literature, nature poetry, hymns, and a sense of timelessness or idealized fusion.

Frequency

Extremely low in both. 'Blended' is used exclusively in standard modern communication.

Grammar

How to Use “blent” in a Sentence

SVO (Subject Verb Object): The painter blent the hues.SVO+A (with prepositional phrase): The singer's voice blent with the orchestra.Passive: The spices were blent by the chef.

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
perfectly blentso blentare blentsounds blentcolours blent
medium
blent togetherblent withblent into
weak
happily blentfinely blentblent seamlessly

Examples

Examples of “blent” in a Sentence

verb

British English

  • The flavours of tea and bergamot blent exquisitely in the old recipe.
  • In the twilight, sea and sky blent on the horizon.

American English

  • Their political philosophies blent into a unique platform.
  • The scents of pine and snow blent in the cold mountain air.

adjective

British English

  • She served a blent whisky of remarkable smoothness.
  • The choir produced a perfectly blent sound.

American English

  • The artist achieved a blent color gradient on the canvas.
  • His argument was a blent logic of ethics and pragmatism.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Not used.

Academic

Very rare, only in historical or literary analysis.

Everyday

Not used.

Technical

Not used.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “blent”

Strong

fusedamalgamatedintermingledcoalesced

Neutral

blendedmixedcombinedmerged

Weak

stirredmingledjoined

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “blent”

separateddividedsegregatedisolatedunmixed

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “blent”

  • Using 'blent' in modern writing or speech.
  • Misspelling as 'blended' when quoting an archaic text that uses 'blent'.
  • Pronouncing it with a long 'e' (/bliːnt/).

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, but it is an archaic and literary past tense and past participle of 'blend'. The standard modern form is 'blended'.

Only if you are directly quoting a historical text that uses it, or if you are writing a literary analysis where you need to replicate an archaic style. Otherwise, use 'blended'.

There is no difference in meaning. 'Blended' is the regular, modern form. 'Blent' is the older, irregular form that has fallen out of common use, surviving mainly in poetry and older literature.

Yes, in archaic or literary contexts, it can function as an adjective meaning 'blended' or 'mixed', as in 'a blent aroma'.

A past tense and past participle form of 'blend', meaning to mix or combine two or more things, typically so that the constituents become indistinguishable.

Blent is usually literary, poetic, archaic. not used in contemporary, neutral prose. in register.

Blent: in British English it is pronounced /blɛnt/, and in American English it is pronounced /blɛnt/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • blent as one

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think of 'blent' as a historical LENT-ering of 'blend', frozen in time from an older form of English.

Conceptual Metaphor

HARMONY IS A PERFECT MIXTURE (e.g., Their voices were so blent, it was a single beautiful sound).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
In the 19th-century hymn, the voices of the congregation perfectly into one harmonious whole.
Multiple Choice

In which context would the word 'blent' be most appropriately used today?