单词 | congregate | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 | congregatecon‧gre‧gate /ˈkɒŋɡrɪɡeɪt $ ˈkɑːŋ-/ verb [intransitive] ![]() ![]() WORD ORIGINcongregate Verb TableOrigin: 1400-1500 Latin past participle of congregare, from com- ( ➔ COM-) + grex ‘crowd’VERB TABLE congregate
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatorwhen people come together to make a crowd► gather Collocations if people gather , they meet or come together and form a crowd: · By the time the president arrived, a large crowd had gathered.gather around/at/in etc: · Angry workers were gathering on the steps of City Hall.· A crowd gathered around to watch the fight. ► form if a crowd forms , more and more people join a group of people who are already watching or listening to something: · A crowd was beginning to form at the scene of the accident. ► congregate if people congregate in a particular place, a large number of them meet there, especially regularly in the same place, and at the same time: congregate at/in/around etc: · On Friday evening, teenagers congregate outside the bars on Greene Street.· Marchers were due to congregate at Market Square for an open-air meeting. ► converge formal if groups of people converge in a particular place, they come there from many different places and meet together with others to form a large crowd, in order to do something or go somewhere: converge on: · The two groups of demonstrators converged on Hyde Park.· About 20,000 motorcyclists will converge on Milwaukee this weekend, to celebrate the 90th birthday of the Harley Davidson bike company. ► collect if a crowd collects , people gradually come together so that there is a crowd, usually because they stop to watch or listen to something: · An hour or so before the press conference, a crowd began to collect outside the building.· A crowd was starting to collect outside the theatre to await the arrival of the prime minister. COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN► people to come together in a group OPP disperse: · An obvious place for people to congregate was crossroads.· Simultaneously, he said, public places like squares, parks and plazas would be liberally placed where people could congregate.· It was estimated that no fewer than 30,000 people could congregate at Grand Central without serious crowding.· Although it was still only about four in the afternoon, a hundred thousand people must have already congregated. ![]() |
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