collection

Câu
An user
The   work   is   currently   in   the   collection   of   the   Metropolitan   Museum   of   Art
🎨
.

Tác phẩm hiện đang nằm trong bộ sưu tập của Bảo tàng Nghệ thuật Metropolitan.

An user
Another   is   in   the   collection   of   Trinity   College Cambridge .

Một cái khác là trong bộ sưu tập của Trinity College, Cambridge.

An user
The   collection   remained   unsold .

Bộ sưu tập vẫn chưa được bán.

An user
The   type   material   is   preserved   in   the   collection   of   the   Redpath   Museum .

Các loại vật liệu được bảo quản trong bộ sưu tập của Bảo tàng Redpath.

An user
The   collection   is   edited   by   Jenny  Offill  and   Elissa  Schappell.

Bộ sưu tập được chỉnh sửa bởi Jenny Offill và Elissa Schappell.

Nghĩa (Tiếng Anh)

  1. (countable, uncountable) A set of items or amount of material procured, gathered or presented together.
  2. (countable, uncountable) A set of pitch classes used by a composer.
  3. (countable, uncountable) The activity of collecting.
  4. (countable, uncountable) A set of sets; used because such a thing is in general too large to comply with the formal definition of a set.
  5. (countable, uncountable) A gathering of money for charitable or other purposes, as by passing a contribution box for donations.
  6. (countable, uncountable) Debt collection.
  7. (countable, obsolete, uncountable) The act of inferring or concluding from premises or observed facts; also, that which is inferred.
  8. (UK, countable, uncountable) The jurisdiction of a collector of excise.
  9. (countable, plural-normally, uncountable) A set of college exams generally taken at the start of the term.
  10. (countable, uncountable) The quality of being collected; calm composure.

Tính thường xuyên

B2
Phát âm là (IPA)
/kəˈlɛkʃən/
Từ nguyên (Tiếng Anh)

In summary

From Middle English colleccioun, collection, from Old French collection, from Latin collēctiō, collēctiōnem, from collēctus, from colligō (“collect together”), composed of con- + legō (“bring together, gather, collect”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *leǵ- (“to gather, collect”). Equivalen to collect + -ion.

Notes

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