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To heap up; to collect or gather (e.g. work, magazines, etc.).
gather
collect
aggregate
garner
accrue
amass
agglomerate
cumulate
gather
collect
aggregate
garner
accrue
1
Families
gather
at the ship's home base, anxiously hoping for good news.
2
Negotiating takes time and you need to think,
gather
information and strategise.
3
Others are trying to
gather
new information to better measure underlying behaviour.
4
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Fans
gather
to watch 'dour German second division football'.
5
Each year they
gather
in the vast library of the family home.
1
Interventions: 14-day food diaries were used to
collect
the food consumption data.
2
It often takes weeks or months to
collect
data on flu deaths.
3
Medical record review was used to
collect
information on cardiovascular risk factors.
4
E-tailers without physical facilities in a state need not
collect
the tax.
5
The funds could also
collect
more money from shareholders, the paper said.
1
However, the underlying intracellular mechanisms leading to product
aggregate
formation remain unknown.
2
Anonymous, de-identified, or
aggregate
information is not Personal Information as used herein.
3
The
aggregate
funding status before the financial crisis was at 100 percent.
4
Background: Conventional analyses present
aggregate
data, masking late responders and efficacy reductions.
5
This measure will
aggregate
the living conditions of all Yemenis, he said.
1
With these words, he hoped he could
garner
the large soldiers' vote.
2
The advice: go elsewhere and
garner
some knowledge of the industry first.
3
Not to mention that this is likely to
garner
widespread international attention.
4
She says it can also
garner
some attention in some interesting forms.
5
An email has been sent out to
garner
the views of members.
1
The profits
accrue
to the gambler -the losses to the IMF.
2
I suspect some benefit will
accrue
from my speaking personally with both.
3
Other benefits that
accrue
from planning include the enhancement of hazard awareness.
4
He has no doubts about the benefits that
accrue
from being fit.
5
Conclusions: NCI-sponsored pediatric QoL studies have high rates of failure to
accrue
.
1
This strong start has helped Ingles
amass
career-best form in the postseason.
2
If you
amass
12 points, you will receive a three month suspension.
3
Ashton Kutcher becomes first celebrity to
amass
1 million followers on Twitter.
4
As organisers, bookie and top golemachist, Pennyhaugh and Judah
amass
good money.
5
Boo has worked hard to
amass
her facts and get them right.
1
Had an interesting talk with Taylor on
agglomerate
and basaltic dykes of Castle Rock.
2
It is an
agglomerate
made of pebbles and cement, the pebbles being elongated as if by pressure.
3
The finer sense detects the differences of them, and begins, first to
agglomerate
,
then to distinguish them.
4
The men of the left thought of "the people" as merely the
agglomerate
of the citizens composing it.
5
But it's only a rumor, undoubtedly one of those urban legends that appear whenever two or three houses
agglomerate
anywhere.
1
To do this, we
cumulate
and detrend the Taylor series of individual Fourier components.
2
Sir Charles labored only to heap up the evidences of evolution; to
cumulate
them till the mass became irresistible.
3
Total
cumulated
work was comparable during continuous and intermittent exercise.
4
Conclusion: Autonomic nervous system status depends on
cumulated
physical fatigue due to increased training loads.
5
The resulting dose rate distribution may be scaled by
cumulated
activity to yield absorbed dose.