The Collaborative International Dictionary
Superimpose \Su`per*im*pose"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Superimposed; p. pr. & vb. n. Superimposing.] To lay or impose on something else; as, a stratum of earth superimposed on another stratum. -- Su`per*im`po*si"tion, n.
Wiktionary
vb. (present participle of superimpose English)
Usage examples of "superimposing".
The rules of reality can only be understood by superimposing the widest range of languages from different worlds upon one another.
I heard, or thought I heard—or think now that I remember hearing, but I may be superimposing other memories—a series of Gaelic words mixed with evocations in a kind of Latin, something on the order of “O pegnia (oh, e oh!
They were a coded message to be read by superimposing them on a grid, a grid that left certain spaces free while covering others.
He worked for hours, superimposing what he Read upon the softened wax in his hands, molding, carving, despairing of achieving the accuracy he had to have.
Once, twice, three times he ran through the reconstructed sequence from his memory crossing—where they had first emerged from the dust, where once again they had vanished—carefully superimposing this pattern upon the actual landscape around him.
There's no record in Kosmgorod's storage of any such superimposing transmissions, but you wouldn't expect it to be there, with a guilty crew to wipe out the evidence.
The largest, central monitor could synthesize the monochromatic images, superimposing them as instructed.