Verb
melt into (third-person singular simple present melts into, present participle melting into, simple past and past participle melted into)
(transitive, idiomatic) To disappear gradually into.
As the bead heats up, the soda, sand and lime melt into glass that incorporates and covers the clay. Source: Internet
Her face, with its glamour-gorgon makeup, softens, as Madame Armfeldt seems to melt into memory itself, and the wan stage light briefly appears to borrow radiance from her. Source: Internet
Take “Desert Rose,” where Kingman & Co. let the melody melt into a trippy breakdown before piecing the whole thing back together again. Source: Internet
And on days such as last Tuesday, when the sun is hitting the rippling water and the green fields melt into the horizon, the well worn adage that ‘it’d be a grand little country if we could only roof it’, came to mind. Source: Internet
Beyond that, using chopped chocolate rather than commercial chips will give the skillet cookie a brownie-like consistency, as chopping creates more than chunks—it also produces a powdery blend of chocolate flecks and shards that melt into the dough. Source: Internet
‘In Bhutan, cows and yaks graze, rice and wheat grow, and people live up and down terraced land that seems to kiss endless blue sky above and melt into pristine waters below.’ Source: Internet