assemble
assemble — verb
1. to build a finished object — say a bookshelf, a machine, or a toy model — by con
to build a finished object — say a bookshelf, a machine, or a toy model — by connecting its separate pieces in the correct order, usually following instructions.
Rashida spent four hours assembling the bookshelf from a flat-pack box.
transitive: assemble + [furniture] + from [package]
The toy comes with clear pictures showing children how to assemble the rocket.
common collocation: how to assemble + [object]
Workers at the Hsinchu factory can assemble a smartphone in under three minutes.
Mateo carefully assembled the model plane on the kitchen table, gluing each tiny wing in place.
The bicycle was easy to assemble, but the brakes still needed adjusting.
- build
broader; can include creating from raw materials, not only joining ready-made parts.
- construct
more formal; often for larger structures like buildings or bridges.
- put together
everyday equivalent; less formal than 'assemble'.
- dismantle
to take a built object apart, often carefully and with the option of rebuilding.
- disassemble
direct opposite; to separate something back into its component parts.
文法句型
assemble + [object made of parts]
assemble + [object] + from/out of [components]
用法筆記
Object is a physical item that has separate parts (furniture, electronics, toys, vehicles, weapons). Often passive in instructions: 'should be assembled by an adult'. Distinguish from sense 2 (gather people): this sense never takes humans as the direct object.
常見錯誤
2. When people assemble, they gather in one place, usually for a planned reason suc
When people assemble, they gather in one place, usually for a planned reason such as a meeting, ceremony, or protest; you can also assemble a group, summoning them to gather.
Hundreds of students assembled outside the library to protest the tuition rise.
intransitive: people + assemble + in/at [place] + for [purpose]
Mr. Yamada assembled the team in the boardroom to share the merger news.
transitive: subject assembles + group + in [place]
By sunrise, families had assembled at the harbour to wait for the rescue boats.
The principal asked all parents to assemble in the school hall before the awards began.
Detective Chen assembled a small team of experts to reopen the cold case.
文法句型
assemble + in/at [place]
assemble + [group of people/things]
用法筆記
More formal than 'gather' or 'get together'. Subjects are usually plural humans (crowds, troops, delegates) or, when transitive, an authority figure who summons a group. Distinguish from sense 1: this sense never takes a physical object made of parts.