foregather

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English[edit]

Verb[edit]

foregather (third-person singular simple present foregathers, present participle foregathering, simple past and past participle foregathered)

  1. Alternative form of forgather
    • 1908, Emerson Hough, Heart's Desire[1]:
      One morning the twins foregathered in the parlor.
    • 1913, Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt[2]:
      These were the same people with whom the judges who rendered these decisions were apt to foregather at social clubs, or dinners, or in private life.
    • 1919, Marie Conway Oemler, A Woman Named Smith[3]:
      A little group of old gentlemen immediately foregathered with them.
    • 1941 January, David L. Smith, “Still More G. & S.W. Nights' Entertainment”, in Railway Magazine, page 16:
      The six drivers foregathered and the rather surprising discovery was made that five out of the six were teetotallers.
    • 1964 January, Cecil J. Allen, “Locomotive Running Past and Present”, in Modern Railways, page 48:
      I was hoping for some further improvement when we were suddenly brought to a stand on the 1 in 125 before Stanley Junction, where a couple of freights and the 8.40 a.m. slow from Struan all had foregathered and helped to block the road.

References[edit]