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  1. Dictionary
    comprise
    /kəmˈprʌɪz/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to have things or people as parts or members; to consist of: The course comprises a class book, a practice book, and a CD. to be the parts or members of something; to make up something: Italian students comprise 60 percent of the class. The class is comprised mainly of Italian and French students.

  3. The meaning of COMPRISE is to be made up of. How to use comprise in a sentence. Did you know? Comprise vs. Compose: Usage Guide

  4. to have things or people as parts or members; to consist of: The course comprises a class book, a practice book, and a CD. to be the parts or members of something; to make up something: Italian students comprise 60 percent of the class. The class is comprised mainly of Italian and French students.

  5. Comprise definition: to include or contain. See examples of COMPRISE used in a sentence.

  6. The main meaning of comprise is ‘have somebody/something as parts or members’. You can use it in two forms: as comprise with an object: The country comprises 20 states. Or you can use it in the passive form be comprised of somebody/something, which has the same meaning: The country is comprised of twenty states.

  7. 2 meanings: 1. to include; contain 2. to constitute the whole of; consist of.... Click for more definitions.

  8. When something comprises other things, it is made up of them or formed from them. The periodic table comprises 118 elements, because the whole comprises the parts. In its traditional use, the word comprise is the opposite of compose: if A comprises X, Y, and Z, then X, Y, and Z compose A.

  9. COMPRISE definition: 1. to consist of particular parts or members: 2. to form part of something, especially a larger…. Learn more.

  10. Jun 6, 2024 · ( transitive) To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts). [usage 1] [from the earlier 15th c.] The whole comprises the parts. The parts are comprised by the whole. (sometimes proscribed, usually in the passive) To compose; to constitute. [usage 2] [usage 3] [from the late 18th c.] The whole is comprised of the parts.

  11. comprise (somewhat formal) to contain or be formed from the things or people mentioned: The collection comprises 327 paintings. Comprise can also be used to refer to the parts or members of something: Older people comprise a large proportion of those living in poverty. However, this is less frequent.