Dictionary
To comprise
verb
To be made up of; to consist of (especially a comprehensive list of parts).
Exact(60)
In time his collection came to comprise several collections.
Five teams were scheduled to comprise the league.
The phrase apparently originated as a confusion of "to comprise" and "to be composed of".
And I doubt if those people would want to comprise an actual government.
The top 10 spots will join two of Gary Player's captain's picks to comprise the team.
One was an assemblage of nuts and bolts deftly bent to comprise an almost-perfect globe.
The issue is whether, taken together, they provided enough detail to comprise a viable prosecution case.
Second, there have to be enough records by a given artist to comprise a set.
They are likely to comprise Williams & Glyn's branches – the former name for its branches outside Scotland.
We're no musicologists but this track appears to comprise one sole chord.
The group is now believed to comprise no more than a few hundred fighters.
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