Synonyms:
aggregate, aggregated, aggregative, mass
Meaning: formed of separate units gathered into a mass or whole; "aggregate expenses include expenses of all divisions combined for the entire year"; "the aggregated amount of indebtedness"
noun
meaning of the word
Synonyms:
mass
Meaning: the property of a body that causes it to have weight in a gravitational field
Synonyms:
batch, deal, flock, good_deal, great_deal, hatful, heap, lot, mass, mess, mickle, mint, mountain, muckle, passel, peck, pile, plenty, pot, quite_a_little, raft, sight, slew, spate, stack, tidy_sum, wad
Meaning: (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent; "a batch of letters"; "a deal of trouble"; "a lot of money"; "he made a mint on the stock market"; "see the rest of the winners in our huge passel of photos"; "it must have cost plenty"; "a slew of journalists"; "a wad of money"
Synonyms:
mass
Meaning: an ill-structured collection of similar things (objects or people)
Synonyms:
Mass
Meaning: (Roman Catholic Church and Protestant Churches) the celebration of the Eucharist
Synonyms:
mass
Meaning: a body of matter without definite shape; "a huge ice mass"
Synonyms:
multitude, masses, mass, hoi_polloi, people, the_great_unwashed
Meaning: the common people generally; "separate the warriors from the mass"; "power to the people"
Synonyms:
bulk, mass, volume
Meaning: the property of something that is great in magnitude; "it is cheaper to buy it in bulk"; "he received a mass of correspondence"; "the volume of exports"
verb
meaning of the word
Synonyms:
mass
Meaning: join together into a mass or collect or form a mass; "Crowds were massing outside the palace"
Usage examples
"Don't you mass, too?"
"He no dar, Mass' Woodley."
Rub the mass through a sieve.
I gazed at the mass of controls.
3. Add a little water, and knead the mass.
They're making mass arrests, indiscriminately.
"Mass Joe, Mass Joe, he go eat up black fellow.
This mass of water cannot escape the general law.
As I knelt there the boat drew nearer, the black mass grew blacker.
The men forced their way through parts of the dense mass by strength.