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Gather

Gather is a verb with several related senses centered on bringing together, collecting, or assembling. The core meaning is to cause things or people to come into one place or group, or to accumulate items over time. It can describe physical actions (gather leaves, gather firewood), social actions (gather a crowd for a meeting), or abstract processes (gather evidence). The word can be used intransitively, as in The audience began to gather, or transitively, as in She gathered the papers into a pile. The noun form, gathering, refers to an assembly or meeting, such as a family gathering, or to the act of gathering itself.

In addition to its primary sense, gather can mean to deduce or infer from information, as in

Origins and form: Gather derives from Old English gegaderian or gaderian, meaning to assemble or come together,

I
gather
that
you
are
leaving.
It
is
also
common
in
idioms
that
describe
gradual
changes
in
force
or
momentum,
such
as
gathering
speed
or
gathering
momentum.
The
expression
may
imply
accumulation
or
consolidation
rather
than
deliberate
distribution,
depending
on
context.
The
verb
is
versatile
across
domains,
including
everyday
conversation,
journalism,
and
academic
writing,
where
it
can
indicate
collection
of
data,
people,
or
materials.
with
cognates
in
other
Germanic
languages.
It
has
since
broadened
to
cover
a
range
of
related
actions,
from
physical
collection
to
inference.
Its
principal
forms
are
gather
(present),
gathered
(past
and
past
participle),
and
gathering
(present
participle
and
noun).
Synonyms
include
collect,
assemble,
amass,
and
accrue;
antonyms
include
scatter
and
disperse.