"Mixed melting point" is a technique used to identify chemical compounds. It is particularly used for organic compounds, where a sample with a known identity and melting point is mixed with an unknown purified sample to determine the melting point.
You can confirm the identity of a compound by determining a mixed melting point. If you prepare a mixture of your unknown chemical and the one you suspect it may be and measure the melting point of the mixture then there are two possible results:
For example, both benzoic acid and mandelic acid are white crystalline solids which melt at 121°C. However a 1: 1 mixture of the two compounds begins to melt at about 80°C.
The usefulness of mixed melting points is limited in that you must have some idea of the chemical nature of your unknown compound and a sample of the suspected compound must be available.