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