/əˈmæs/
OriginFrom Middle English *amassen (found only as Middle English massen (“to amass”)), from Anglo-Norman amasser, from Medieval Latin amassāre, from ad + massa (“lump, mass”). See mass.
- transitiveTo collect into a mass or heap.
- transitiveto gather a great quantity of; to accumulate.
“to amass a treasure or a fortune”
“to amass words or phrases”
“[…] he reluctantly returned to the old Nevada mines, there to recruit his health and to amass money enough to allow him to pursue his object without privation.”
- intransitiveTo accumulate; to assemble.
- obsoleteA large number of things collected or piled together.
“[T]his Pillar [the "Compounded Order"] is nothing in effect, but a Medlie, or an Amaſſe of all the precedent Ornaments, making a nevv kinde, by ſtealth, and though the moſt richly tricked, yet the poo”
“[…] others are drawn, not as portraits, not strict copies of these most essential characteristic parts, but filled up afterwards from memory, and a general idea of an amass of arms, without the specif”
- obsoleteThe act of amassing.
“He [the general] must neuer permit the Captaines to depart from the place, where he made the Amasse and collection of the Companies, with their bands out of order or disseuered, although they should d”
Formsamasses(present, singular, third-person) · amassing(participle, present) · amassed(participle, past) · amassed(past) · amasses(plural)