Usage: {Assemblage}, {Assembly}. An assembly consists only of persons; an assemblage may be composed of things as well as persons, as, an assemblage of incoherent objects. Nor is every assemblage of persons an assembly; since the latter term denotes a body who have met, and are acting, in concert for some common end, such as to hear, to deliberate, to unite in music, dancing, etc. An assemblage of skaters on a lake, or of horse jockeys at a race course, is not an assembly, but might be turned into one by collecting into a body with a view to discuss and decide as to some object of common interest.
His most enduring achievement was probably the assemblage of the land where the United Nations now sits.
Among the most impressive is the late Joseph Beuys's "Blitzschlag mit Lichtstein auf Hirsch," an awesome assemblage of amorphous bronze forms, stones, steel rods and machinery.
In the paddock before the go, the crowd of reporters, photographers and well-dressed gawkers around Alysheba pressed so close that trainer Jack Van Berg had to pause from his saddling ritual to warn the assemblage to stand back.
Foreign Minister Allan Wagner of Peru told the assemblage Tuesday, "We have not come to defend a regime, or even less a person who has been insubordinate to civil and constitutional authority.
This time the assemblage of experts was given a name _ the Hostage Reception Team.
The state argued that it had satisfied the original court order that forced the quick assemblage of tents and barbed wire on a site in the Hackensack Meadowlands.
A large category, "Other Private Receipts on Services," includes a miscellaneous assemblage of services provided to foreigners, including advertising, business and legal help.
Still, Mr. Shaw expects the unit to grow in 1992 as more retailers contract out for display and product assemblage.
Ever since Germany was dismembered after World War II, West Germans have grudgingly accepted an assemblage of armed might that makes their territory one of the most militarized in the world.
The first person to give that assemblage word of the outcome was Dornan, R-Calif., who got the verdict wrong _ proclaiming that North had been convicted of only two counts.