Dictionary
syn•chro•nize
Pronunciation: (sing'kru-nīz"), [key]
—v., -nized, -niz•ing.
—
v.t.
1. to cause to indicate the same time, as one timepiece with another:
Synchronize your watches.
2. to cause to go on, move, operate, work, etc., at the same rate and exactly together:
They synchronized their steps and walked on together.
3. Motion Pictures, Television.
a. to cause (sound and action) to match precisely:
to synchronize the sound of footsteps with the actor's movements.
b. to match the sound and action in (a scene).
4. to cause to agree in time of occurrence; assign to the same time or period, as in a history.
5. to adjust the periodicities of (two or more electrical or mechanical devices) so that the periods are equal or integral multiples or fractions of each other.
—
v.i.
1. to occur at the same time or coincide or agree in time.
2. to go on, move, operate, work, etc., at the same rate and exactly together; recur together.
Also, esp. Brit.,syn'chro•nise".Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Copyright © 1997, by Random House, Inc., on Infoplease.