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Discover LudwigThe phrase "assembling himself" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where someone is putting themselves together, either physically or metaphorically, often after a period of disarray or confusion.
Example: "After a long day, he took a moment to breathe and start assembling himself before facing the challenges ahead."
Alternatives: "putting himself together" or "gathering himself".
Exact(2)
Every day since he had walked away from the jail had been a lesson in assembling himself, and he did not want to lose that". The structure of "The Signal" is shaped by days, by the rise and fall of the sun: six days in the mountains, six chapters in the book.
I have spoken to at least two gay people who, while playing ME2, have expressed frustration because in their own minds, the Shepard they created, and the Shepard they play, is gay this may or may not be a choice they made, but only the result of the character assembling himself organically in their heads—only the game doesn't present them the option to express this.
Similar(58)
The ZX81 was launched on 5 March 1981 in two versions (though with identical components) – a pre-assembled machine or a cheaper kit version, which the user could assemble himself.
Mr Harding said his son had been excited about having the bike, which he had assembled himself.
There's the voluminous computer tower — a high-rise, almost — that Mr. Carlson assembled himself.
The core of the film is a one-man, ever-evolving multimedia slide show that Gore assembled himself.
And he still cringes at the memory of barking orders at his wife while she assembled a living-room furniture set that he could not assemble himself.
By Emily Carter The New Yorker, February 14 , 1994P. 86 Shamble-shanked, and sparrow-hopping on the balls of his feet, Johnny McDonnell assembled himself in his counsellor's office.
He then assembled himself a crew of more than 30 people, working his contacts in Hollywood to convince the starry US actor Emile Hirsch to come on board.
With a few exceptions — such as his massive, 1977 "Stone Field" of glacial boulders, on a public site in Hartford, Connecticut — Andre has stuck to working with materials he can assemble himself, with his own hands.
My vortex tour with Mark Griffon of Sedona Mystical Tours ($135 ,three hours) – who starts off the morning with a sage cleansing near a stone-circle "medicine wheel" he's assembled himself in his backyard – is at times uncomfortably intense, as one of the attendees breaks down into sobs during a meditation against a juniper tree called Fred.
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