congregate 的 3 个定义
con·gre·gat·ed, con·gre·gat·ing.
- to come together; assemble, especially in large numbers: People waiting for rooms congregated in the hotel lobby.
con·gre·gat·ed, con·gre·gat·ing.
- to bring together in a crowd, body, or mass; assemble; collect.
- congregated; assembled.
- formed by collecting; collective.
congregate 近义词
assemble, come together
更多congregate例句
- The study recommended that airports work with qualified HVAC engineers to determine how they can augment current systems, particularly in areas where travelers tend to congregate.
- The coronavirus has been particularly virulent in places where people congregate — churches, nursing homes, prisons, close-quarters work environments and the like.
- “It’s unwise to bring disparate people together in a congregate setting during the time of the pandemic, and the Super Bowl is no exception to that,” says John Swartzberg, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California, Berkeley.
- Galaxies congregate in superclusters on scales vastly greater than anything experts had considered before the 20th century.
- The meeting usually would have taken place in the Gertrude-Lafrance cafeteria, but by the spring it had become part of the Quebec medical facility’s red zone, making it an unsafe place to congregate.
- A few children, settler children, congregate near what appears to have been the bus station.
- During the Iranian iteration, one event allowed customers to congregate with a local dining in Iran.
- An NYPD official says an AP reporter called to ask where people of Chechen descent might congregate in New York City.
- The whole point of a bohemia is that people congregate in a relatively well-defined area.
- Yet in the film, the dwarves, hobbit and wizard all congregate to a single tree that remains untouched by the fire.
- Patriots were inclined to congregate about the Lion d'Or and to ask awkward questions.
- At its upper end, below my windows, all the cats of the neighbourhood congregate as soon as darkness gathers.
- There was no help for it, and men and women had to congregate in these barns together.
- The trouble was in the outfield—where the trouble in such contests are sure to congregate.
- The term is now used loosely of any locality in a city or country where Jews congregate.