To amass, usually for one's personal collection.
The word 'hoard' is correct and usable in written English. It is a verb meaning to store and accumulate a large amount of something. Example sentence: She hoarded all of her old clothes in the attic.
We won't let those large developers just hoard land – waiting for it to go up in value when it could be used to build homes.
The best excuse ever to hoard to our hearts' content.
It's widely believed that Nakamoto has a huge hoard of Bitcoins created back at the currency's dawn, which could now be cashed in for vast amounts.
That's the tough part: now that I live in such an ordered oasis I must resist the urge to hoard more clutter behind cupboard doors.
In football, England's top clubs argue against, for example, sharing money more equally because they are competing with the likes of Real Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus, who hoard so much of the money in their own countries.
Yet the bankers themselves had no problem telling journalists how they planned to use the cheap capital to buy competitors or hoard cash for a rainy day.
Property developers, for instance, would be less inclined to hoard undeveloped land if they had to pay an annual levy on it.
Thanks to Ludwig my first paper got accepted! The editor wrote me that my manuscript was well-written
Listya Utami K.
PhD Student in Biology, Bandung Institute of Technology, Indonesia