How to Use congregate in a Sentence
- It's a place where the homeless congregate.
- Skiers congregated around the lodge's fireplace.
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In one of the wheels of the stove, 15 roaches congregated.
— David J. Neal, Miami Herald, 23 Feb. 2024 -
The cats congregate near the nesting sites and kill the hatchlings, which are easy prey for the felines.
— Jacquelyne Germain, Smithsonian Magazine, 23 Dec. 2022 -
To show off for females, the male birds congregate at an area known as a lek.
— Sarah Kuta, Smithsonian Magazine, 25 Sep. 2023 -
Hang your trap on tree branches where the wasps like to congregate.
— Rebecca Straus, Good Housekeeping, 28 Mar. 2023 -
Gone are the days of congregating around a hearth or a fireplace, Freyinger says.
— Lisa Boone, Los Angeles Times, 15 May 2023 -
There is plenty of room to congregate inside & out on the deck.
— Josie Howell | Jhowell@al.com, al, 17 Mar. 2023 -
Across the first half and most of the second half, the marsh-like conditions forced players to congregate closer to the ball.
— Tom Krasovic, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 Mar. 2024 -
Avoid hiking through tall grass and dense brush where ticks like to congregate 2.
— Scott Lafee, San Diego Union-Tribune, 20 June 2023 -
There was no privacy in the Hall, and there were no places to congregate indoors.
— Eric Lach, The New Yorker, 13 Oct. 2023 -
The squeegee is especially deft in the corners and at the tops of crown molding where mounds of dust like to congregate.
— Shanna Shipin, Glamour, 29 Dec. 2022 -
Leaders have now called on Watts residents not to congregate in large groups for the rest of 2023.
— Brennon Dixson, Los Angeles Times, 2 Aug. 2023 -
Guests can congregate around the center island or at the breakfast bar.
— Dallas News, 20 Nov. 2022 -
Outside their rooms, passengers can congregate on the bridge, the galley, or in the dining room and lounge.
— Karen Catchpole, Travel + Leisure, 7 Feb. 2024 -
Many of the Venezuelan migrants congregate outside a thatch-roof soup kitchen opened just a few months ago by an aid group.
— Julie Turkewitz Federico Rios, New York Times, 14 Sep. 2023 -
The whales – the world’s largest living creatures – congregate off the southern tip of the island nation year-round, in an area that many ships pass through.
— Nick Roll, The Christian Science Monitor, 24 Oct. 2022 -
My flight leaving Houston is delayed because bees have congregated on the tip of one of the wings.
— Sarah Kuta, Smithsonian Magazine, 5 May 2023 -
The fairways separate the hotel from a shimmering strand of beach where sand plovers congregated on the rocks and seals bobbed in the waves.
— Aaron Hicklin, Travel + Leisure, 19 Jan. 2024 -
Many whales congregate year after year along the same stretches of coastline.
— Katie Hunt, CNN, 19 Dec. 2022 -
The kitchen has always felt like a place of comfort where everyone can congregate and feel at home.
— Chelsea Hylton, Los Angeles Times, 21 Dec. 2023 -
The first structural engineer who inspected the building told Wulf and his team that the church was not a safe place for groups to congregate.
— Noah Goldberg, Los Angeles Times, 1 Mar. 2024 -
Sheila Dillon, the city’s housing chief, said about 150 people congregate in the area daily, and that many of them are not homeless.
— Danny McDonald, BostonGlobe.com, 4 May 2023 -
Venice will place a 25-person limit on the size of groups that can congregate in the city, the Venice City Council said in a statement Saturday.
— Ryan Hogg, Fortune Europe, 3 Jan. 2024 -
In the wake of Lord’s death, Queen Creek police pledged extra patrols in areas where teens congregate.
— Madeline Morrison, NBC News, 26 Jan. 2024 -
Prior to the streaming boom, writers congregated in rooms to discuss the path that a show is taking.
— Emma Roth, The Verge, 14 July 2023 -
When the water temperature warms into the 50s, the fish begin to congregate and spawn.
— Paul A. Smith, Journal Sentinel, 16 Apr. 2023 -
The eat-in island with room for up to five transforms the kitchen from a place to prepare meals to a gathering place for friends or family to congregate.
— Emma Reynolds, Robb Report, 5 July 2023 -
Meta has got a lot riding on the idea that people in the future will want to congregate in digital worlds with their colleagues or loved ones.
— Naomi Nix, Washington Post, 11 Oct. 2022 -
To ensure that many worms congregate at the same time, the species synchronizes its reproductive timing with the cycles of the moon.
— Elise Cutts, Quanta Magazine, 19 Dec. 2023
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In the meantime, because of the law, the state is on the hook to pay for any stays in congregate care settings that last longer than two weeks.
— Ed Williams, ProPublica, 7 Oct. 2022 -
There are places to fight, and places to sleep when you’ve been cast out of the congregate bedroom where five to six couples sleep side by side.
— Curbed, 21 July 2022 -
Best to keep them at home and not put them in a congregate facility.
— Emma Colton, Washington Examiner, 23 Feb. 2021 -
Mike Feuer, acknowledge that the scale of the need means the city can’t totally discount congregate settings.
— Benjamin Oreskes, Los Angeles Times, 4 May 2022 -
The hotels would replace a 275-bed congregate shelter, Agustin said.
— Lilly Price, baltimoresun.com, 22 Feb. 2022 -
Find out where your ideal relationships congregate and who has the keys to this kingdom.
— Jared Yellin, Forbes, 27 Jan. 2022 -
Several months after vaccines were first rolled out for health care workers and those in congregate care settings, some parts of the signup process have changed.
— BostonGlobe.com, 5 Apr. 2021 -
Her team has been worried that the move to get people back inside congregate spaces was premature.
— Benjamin Oreskes, Los Angeles Times, 13 Aug. 2021 -
The success of this multimodal Covid-19 control can serve as a guide for other congregate settings.
— William A. Haseltine, Forbes, 7 Oct. 2021 -
The coalition has taken a leadership role in the effort as the city seeks to shut down its congregate shelter at Sullivan Arena.
— Emily Goodykoontz, Anchorage Daily News, 26 Apr. 2022 -
Where stars congregate is a dusty place; luckily, Webb’s infrared eye will allow scientists to peer past the dusty curtain and see through it all.
— Shi En Kim, Smithsonian Magazine, 16 Aug. 2021 -
The congregate service, held in its offices where anyone could come in to grab a meal, is currently suspended due to the pandemic.
— Neetish Basnet, The Arizona Republic, 6 Dec. 2021 -
What to expect:A traditional sit-down congregate meal at tables with all the trimmings and fixings.
— Ellie Willard, The Arizona Republic, 23 Nov. 2022 -
Thousands of leopard sharks congregate during the summer in the shallow waters off La Jolla.
— Rachel Schnalzer, Los Angeles Times, 4 Aug. 2022 -
Many questions have been left unanswered, such as how the advice might apply to schools or people in congregate settings such as nursing homes or prisons.
— Maggie Fox, CNN, 29 Dec. 2021 -
There have been public health concerns about spreading the coronavirus in congregate settings, and currently only about 60% of the beds the agency is paying for are in use.
— The New York Times, Arkansas Online, 27 Mar. 2022 -
That includes $15 million the city spent on non-congregate shelter in various hotels.
— Amelia Pak-Harvey, The Indianapolis Star, 12 Nov. 2021 -
Companies like Meta will provide large platforms where people will work, play and congregate.
— Dar Meshi, The Conversation, 14 Jan. 2022 -
Efforts to reinstate the congregate lunch service are under way.
— cleveland, 17 June 2022 -
Face coverings should still be used in congregate settings such as prisons and homeless shelters.
— Paulina Pineda, The Arizona Republic, 19 May 2021 -
Darling says congregate housing does not work because the vast majority of homeless people won’t move without a room of their own.
— James Rainey, Los Angeles Times, 13 Sep. 2022 -
Cuyahoga County was flagged for just two of the indicators being tracked - the two-week case rate and the share of cases outside of congregate living facilities.
— Rich Exner, cleveland, 4 Mar. 2021 -
Preventing a child’s placement in a congregate facility due to a lack of available foster homes.
— Holly V. Hays, The Indianapolis Star, 27 Oct. 2021 -
Since the 1960s, commercial hotel rooms have mostly been used to shelter families when there’s no longer room for them in congregate shelter settings.
— Megan Evershed, The New Republic, 31 Mar. 2021 -
Three decades after the Tompkins Square riots, the housing crisis has become only more dire, while fear of the congregate shelter system has remained unchanged.
— New York Times, 2 Apr. 2022 -
City health care workers and employees in congregate setting such as group homes will face earlier deadlines.
— From Usa Today Network and Wire Reports, USA TODAY, 27 July 2021 -
Liberals, by contrast, who tend to fear the pandemic more, might see doctors’ offices as dangerous congregate settings and seek to avoid them.
— Jeffrey Kluger, Time, 23 Feb. 2021 -
That, the judge noted, would result in more migrants being processed in congregate settings where contagious disease can be spread.
— Susan Montoya Bryan, ajc, 15 June 2022 -
Plumbing and electrical systems must reroute from large, congregate areas to each new apartment or condo.
— Noah Arroyo, San Francisco Chronicle, 17 Oct. 2022 -
Tars doesn’t want the 9th Circuit to embrace a view that temporary congregate shelter, not housing, is a solution for homeless people.
— Benjamin Oreskes, Los Angeles Times, 25 Apr. 2021
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'congregate.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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