释义 |
View usage for: (kəleɪt) Word forms: 3rd person singular presenttense collates, present participle collating, past tense, past participle collatedverbWhen you collate pieces of information, you gather them all together and examine them. Roberts has spent much of his working life collating the data on which the studywas based. [VERB noun] They have begun to collate their own statistics on racial abuse. [VERB noun] Synonyms: collect, gather, organize, assemble More Synonyms of collate collation (kəleɪʃən) uncountable noun Many countries have no laws governing the collation of personal information. [+ of] collate in British English (kɒˈleɪt, kə-) verb (transitive)1. to examine and compare (texts, statements, etc) in order to note points of agreement and disagreement 2. (in library work) to check the number and order of (the pages of a book) 3. bookbindinga. to check the sequence of (the sections of a book) after gathering b. a nontechnical word for gather (sense 9) 4. (often foll by to) Christianity to appoint (an incumbent) to a benefice Word origin C16: from Latin collātus brought together (past participle of conferre to gather), from com- together + lātus, past participle of ferre to bring collate in American English (ˈkoʊˌleɪt; ˈkɑˈleɪt; kəˈleɪt) verb transitiveWord forms: colˌlated or colˌlating1. to compare (texts, data, etc.) critically in order to consolidate, note similarities and differences, etc. 2. a. to gather (the sections of a book, pages of a document, etc.) together in proper order b. to examine (such material) to see that all pages, plates, etc. are in proper order, as for binding 3. to examine (a book) to see whether all pages and plates are present 4. to appoint (a clergyman) to a benefice SIMILAR WORDS: comˈpare Derived forms collator (ˈcolˌlator) noun Word origin < L collatus, pp. of conferre, to bring together < com-, together + ferre, to bear 1Examples of 'collate' in a sentencecollate The minister himself, Miss Parker, and two clerical civil servants to collate, to note, to photocopy.It just so happened that Gaisford was well placed to discover or collate information of that kind.One of the strengths was an ability to process new information and collate it with old unusually fast. In other languagescollate British English: collate VERB When you collate pieces of information, you gather them all together and examine them. He has spent much of his working life collating the data on which the study was based. - American English: collate
- Brazilian Portuguese: cotejar
- Chinese: 整理信息
- European Spanish: cotejar
- French: collationner
- German: zusammentragen
- Italian: collazionare
- Japanese: 情報を集めて分析する
- Korean: 대조하다
- European Portuguese: recolher
- Latin American Spanish: cotejar
Definition to gather together and put in order Roberts collated the data on which the study was based. Additional synonymsDefinition to collect or gather together There was nowhere for students to assemble before classes. Synonyms gather, meet, collect, rally, flock, accumulate, come together, muster, convene, congregate, foregather Definition to put together or make up The drawing is beautifully composed. Synonyms arrange, make up, construct, put together, order, organizeDefinition to come or bring together In the evenings, we gathered round the fire and talked. Synonyms congregate, assemble, get together, collect, group, meet, mass, rally, flock, come together, muster, convene, converge, rendezvous, foregather |