mergee: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples
Low/C2Formal, Business, Technical, Academic
Quick answer
What does “mergee” mean?
A person or entity that is taken over, absorbed, or acquired in a merger.
Audio
Pronunciation
Definition
Meaning and Definition
A person or entity that is taken over, absorbed, or acquired in a merger.
More broadly, any party or object that undergoes a process of combination, integration, or assimilation into a larger or dominant entity. This can apply to employees, companies, files, datasets, or ideas.
Dialectal Variation
British vs American Usage
Differences
Equally low-frequency in both varieties. Slight preference in American business/legal jargon. In British English, alternatives like 'target company' or 'acquired firm' may be marginally more common.
Connotations
Neutral technical term. Can imply passivity or being acted upon.
Frequency
Very rare in general discourse; confined to specific professional contexts like M&A, HR, corporate law, and computer science.
Grammar
How to Use “mergee” in a Sentence
[merger] + [verb] + the mergeethe mergee + [is/was] + [past participle]treat the mergee asVocabulary
Collocations
Examples
Examples of “mergee” in a Sentence
verb
British English
- The larger firm will merge the smaller mergee next quarter.
- They plan to merge the data from the primary mergee.
American English
- The corporation merged the regional mergee into its national structure.
- Our software can automatically merge the selected mergee branch.
adverb
British English
- [Standard adverbial form 'mergedly' is non-existent and not used.]
American English
- [Standard adverbial form 'mergedly' is non-existent and not used.]
adjective
British English
- The mergee company's leadership was offered advisory roles.
- Mergee employee benefits were harmonised over two years.
American English
- The mergee firm's assets were reassessed.
- All mergee department heads reported to the new VP.
Usage
Meaning in Context
Business
Refers to a company being taken over. 'The mergee's brand was gradually phased out post-acquisition.'
Academic
Used in sociology or management studies discussing organizational behavior. 'The study examined morale among employees of the mergee.'
Everyday
Virtually never used.
Technical
In computing, can refer to a branch, file, or dataset being merged into another. 'The algorithm prioritises changes from the primary mergee.'
Vocabulary
Synonyms of “mergee”
Strong
Neutral
Vocabulary
Antonyms of “mergee”
Watch out
Common Mistakes When Using “mergee”
- Using 'mergee' to mean the act of merging (correct: 'merger' or 'merging').
- Pronouncing it /'mɜːdʒi/ (two syllables, stress on first) – correct stress is on the second syllable.
- Using it in everyday contexts where 'combining' or 'joining' would suffice.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
No, it is a low-frequency, specialized term used primarily in business, law, and technical fields like computing.
'Merger' refers to the process or the resulting combined entity, or sometimes the initiating company. 'Mergee' refers specifically to the entity that is being taken over or absorbed during that process.
Yes, particularly in Human Resources contexts, it can refer to an employee of the company being acquired, e.g., 'support for mergees during the transition'.
Yes. The stress is on the second syllable: /mɜːrˈdʒiː/. The common mistake is to stress the first syllable like in 'merger'.
A person or entity that is taken over, absorbed, or acquired in a merger.
Mergee is usually formal, business, technical, academic in register.
Mergee: in British English it is pronounced /mɜːˈdʒiː/, and in American English it is pronounced /mɝːˈdʒiː/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.
Phrases
Idioms & Phrases
- “[none - term is too technical for idiomatic use]”
Learning
Memory Aids
Mnemonic
Think of the suffix '-ee' as in 'employee' (one who is employed) or 'trainee' (one who is trained). A MERGEE is one who is MERGed.
Conceptual Metaphor
ASSIMILATION IS ABSORPTION (the mergee is consumed/digested). HIERARCHY IS UP (the mergee is the lower, subordinate party).
Practice
Quiz
What does 'mergee' specifically refer to?