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collect (v. intr.)
1.join together into a mass or collect or form a mass"Crowds were massing outside the palace"
collect (adj.)
1.payable by the recipient on delivery"a collect call" "the letter came collect" "a COD parcel"
collect (adv.)
1.make a telephone call or mail a package so that the recipient pays"call collect" "send a package collect"
collect (n.)
1.a short prayer generally preceding the lesson in the Church of Rome or the Church of England
2.members of a cooperative enterprise
collect (v.)
1.assemble or get together"gather some stones" "pull your thoughts together"
2.get or bring together"accumulate evidence"
3.call for and obtain payment of"we collected over a million dollars in outstanding debts" "he collected the rent"
4.get or gather together"I am accumulating evidence for the man's unfaithfulness to his wife" "She is amassing a lot of data for her thesis" "She rolled up a small fortune"
5.gather or collect"You can get the results on Monday" "She picked up the children at the day care center" "They pick up our trash twice a week"
6.form a group or unite"The groups banded together"
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Merriam Webster
CollectCol*lect" (kŏl*lĕkt"), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Collected; p. pr. & vb. n. Collecting.] [L. collecrus, p. p. of collerige to bind together; col- + legere to gather: cf. OF. collecter. See Legend, and cf. Coil, v. t., Cull, v. t.]
1. To gather into one body or place; to assemble or bring together; to obtain by gathering.
A band of men
Collected choicely from each country. Shak.
'Tis memory alone that enriches the mind, by preserving what our labor and industry daily collect. Watts.
2. To demand and obtain payment of, as an account, or other indebtedness; as, to collect taxes.
3. To infer from observed facts; to conclude from premises. [Archaic.] Shak.
Which sequence, I conceive, is very ill collected. Locke.
To collect one's self, to recover from surprise, embarrassment, or fear; to regain self-control.
Syn. -- To gather; assemble; congregate; muster; accumulate; garner; aggregate; amass; infer; deduce.
CollectCol*lect", v. i.
1. To assemble together; as, the people collected in a crowd; to accumulate; as, snow collects in banks.
2. To infer; to conclude. [Archaic]
Whence some collect that the former word imports a plurality of persons. South.
CollectCol"lect, n. [LL. collecta, fr. L. collecta a collection in money; an assemblage, fr. collerige: cf. F. collecte. See Collect, v. t.] A short, comprehensive prayer, adapted to a particular day, occasion, or condition, and forming part of a liturgy.
The noble poem on the massacres of Piedmont is strictly a collect in verse. Macaulay.
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⇨ definição - Wikipedia
collect (adj.)
collect (n.)
collect (v.)
accumulate, aggregate, amass, assemble, band, band together, call for, cash in, cash on delivery, cluster, come together, compile, confederate, congregate, convene, convoke, cull, eke out, fetch, flock, garner, gather, gather together, gather up, get, handle, hoard, meet, muster, obtain, pick, pick up, pile up, pull in, pull together, raise, rally, retrieve, roll up, run up, store, take in
collect (v. intr.)
Ver também
collect (v.)
↘ cashable, cashing, collector, encashable, redeemable ≠ distribute, propagate, put about, spread, spread out
collect (v. intr.)
↘ crowd
⇨ 1-800-COLLECT • B-Sides Collect • Collect 'Em All • Collect Dis Edition • Collect Pakistan Postage Stamps • Collect Pond • Collect call • Collect for Purity • Collect on delivery • The Singles Collect • Toll Collect
Wikipedia
In Christian liturgy, a collect /ˈkɒlɛkt/[1] is both a liturgical action and a short, general prayer. In the Middle Ages, the prayer was referred to in Latin as collectio, but in the more ancient sources, as oratio. Collects appear in the liturgies of Roman Catholic, Anglican,and Lutheran churches, among others.
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The liturgical collect is a dialog between the celebrant and the people. It follows a hymn of praise such as the "Gloria in Excelsis Deo" after the opening of the service. It starts with the celebrant's greeting, "The Lord be with you", to which the people respond, "And also with you" or, "And with your spirit." The celebrant then invites all to pray by saying, "Let us pray". In the more ancient practice, an invitation to kneel was given, and the people spent some short time in silent prayer, after which they were invited to stand. Then, the celebrant concluded the time of prayer by "collecting" their prayers in a unified petition of a general form, referred to as a collect. Many collects in use today were originally composed in Latin, wherein they adhered to a flowing chanted style. Traditionally, a collect consisted of a single sentence, although this was often accomplished through non-standard punctuation, with a colon or semi-colon taking the place of a period. In some contemporary liturgical texts, this practice has been discontinued in favor of more standard sentence constructions.
In contemporary Catholic usage, the collect corresponds to the Opening Prayer. It is sung or recited audibly throughout by the celebrant, and follows the invocation "Let us pray", usually without a period of silent prayer. It may or may not employ the greeting dialog.
Typically two or three collects may be used in a traditional Roman Mass.
For the Anglican rite, Thomas Cranmer (d. 1556) translated collects into English and designated them for each Sunday of the year in the Book of Common Prayer.
Similarly, Lutheran liturgies typically retain traditional collects for each Sunday of the liturgical year. In the newly released Evangelical Lutheran Worship, however, the set of prayers has been expanded to incorporate different Sunday collects for each year of the lectionary cycle, so that the prayers more closely coordinate with the lectionary scripture readings for the day. To achieve this expansion from one year's worth of Sunday collects to three years', modern prayer texts have been added.
Collects (the liturgical action and the prayer) have a recognizable form:
Look up collect in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
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