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Discover LudwigThe phrase "assorted crowd" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a diverse or varied group of people gathered in one place.
Example: "The festival attracted an assorted crowd, with families, students, and tourists all mingling together."
Alternatives: "diverse group" or "varied audience".
Exact(2)
He regularly arrived at friends' homes with acquaintances he had casually picked up on the way; he once turned up at an official staff party with an assorted crowd he had gathered during his journey on the underground.
Back in the TV room the porn is still playing, and Sue, in her fifties, is masturbating to climax while being cheered on by Val, Pam and an assorted crowd of other attendees.
Similar(58)
In the Rembrandt etching, the Saviour is brought out as if for a curtain call, hands bound, on a high stage; spectators look out from lead-paned windows, an ill-assorted crowd (in the first five states of the etching) jostling below.
"Politically challenged Pakistani liberals -- a motley crowd that includes members of human rights and civil liberties organisations, journalists, analysts, lawyers and assorted professionals -- are utterly incapable of comprehending the geo-strategic context in which Musharraf manoeuvred to defend Pakistan's interest.
The others have been an assorted bunch.
10 p.m. 3) A LOT TO DIGEST For a digestif, join the assorted intellectuals crowding the classic zinc bar at La Belle Hortense (31, rue Vieille-du-Temple; 33-1-48-04-71-60; www.cafeine.com), a cozy Old World-style wine bar.
During the January gathering, the identification process essentially involved Mr. Brechter, Ms. Crowder and assorted other volunteers crowding around a blossom and debating what it was.
A bogged-down bus en route to Provincetown; a crowd of assorted passengers, all taking the dealy with real American amity and good nature.
A host of international stars including Beyoncé, Pink and Duffy entertained the feisty scouse crowd, and assorted presenters jetted in from around the world.
Obama's win was mentioned in the opening links, with the crowd and assorted celebrities cheering his name, while host Katy Perry later emerged in a shimmering yellow dress adorned with a picture of the Illinois senator.
By Mary McCarthy The New Yorker, April 22 , 1944P. 77 A bogged-down bus en route to Provincetown; a crowd of assorted passengers, all taking the dealy with real American amity and good nature.
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