comprise
Word family adjectivecomprisableverbcomprisenouncomprisal
com·prise /kəmˈpraɪz/ ●●○ W3 AWL verb formal 1 [linking verb]CONSIST OF/BE MADE OF to consist of particular parts, groups etc 包括,由…构成 The house comprises two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a living room. 这座房子有两间卧室、一间厨房和一间起居室。
be comprised of somebody/something The committee is comprised of well-known mountaineers. 委员会由知名的登山运动员组成。
5Don’t say that something comprises of things or people.不要说 something comprises of things or people.
► see thesaurus at consist 2 [transitiveT]BE to form part of a larger group of people or things 构成,组成 SYN constitute, make up Women comprise a high proportion of part-time workers. 兼职人员中妇女占了很大一部分。
n GrammarComprise is not used in the progressive. You say: The exam comprises four questions.
✗Don’t say: The exam is comprising four questions. The participle form comprising is often used: Food exports are very important, comprising 74% of the total.
Comprise is often used in the passive with of: The organization is comprised of four parts.
✗Don’t say: The organization comprises of four parts. comprise• The house comprises 2 bedrooms, a kitchen, and a living room.• The world's bulk fleet comprises 7,798 vessels, 2,231 of which are between 16 and 20 years old.• Hindus comprise 82% of India's population.• The reactions of the community will be the aggregate of the reactions of the individuals it comprises.• The first is called algorithmic, which comprises a procedure or series of instructions used to solve a specific type of problem.• It comprises acts of Parliament and subordinate legislation made under the authority of the parent act.• Unlike a company, a partnership possesses no legal personality separate from the partners that comprise it.• The city's population comprises mainly Asians and Europeans.• The Sea Grant Program comprises over 300 colleges nationwide.• Its principal archival collection comprises records relating to some 140,000 charities.• It absorbed so much arsenic that, in just two weeks, arsenic comprised two per cent of its entire weight. Origin comprise (1400-1500) Old French past participle of
comprendre, from
Latin comprehendere;
→ COMPREHEND