Verb
To cause to be one; to make into a unit; to unite; to view as one.
Source: Webster's dictionaryYou will find that hate can unify people more quickly and more fervently than devotion ever could. Brandon Sanderson
I really believe deep in my soul that we're going to have to step up and face these challenges and be tough and pull together and unify and be creative and be willing to sacrifice. Zach Wamp
We will make every effort to unify all ethnic groups, to strengthen belief in Taiwan and to persist in reform. Chen Shui-bian
The issue for us is rebuilding a governing majority that is comfortable with differences that can transcend the divisiveness and unify behind the principles that we know our party has succeeded on. Eric Cantor
The world is a complicated place, and there's a lot of division between people. The performing arts tend to unify people in a way nothing else does. David Rubenstein
Because you basically won a close re-election, your first task is to unify the city. And it's done not with words but with actions, by reaching out, to the supporters of your opponent as well as to reassure your own supporters. Marc Morial