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Showing results for assemblage. Search instead for Reassemblage.
Synonyms

assemblage

American  
[uh-sem-blij, a-sahn-blazh] / əˈsɛm blɪdʒ, a sɑ̃ˈblaʒ /

noun

  1. a group of persons or things gathered or collected; an assembly; collection; aggregate.

  2. the act of assembling; state of being assembled.

  3. Fine Arts.

    1. a sculptural technique of organizing or composing into a unified whole a group of unrelated and often fragmentary or discarded objects.

    2. a work of art produced by this technique.

  4. Archaeology. the aggregate of artifacts and other remains found on a site, considered as material evidence in support of a theory concerning the culture or cultures inhabiting it.


assemblage British  
/ əˈsɛmblɪdʒ /

noun

  1. a number of things or persons assembled together; collection; assembly

  2. a list of dishes served at a meal or the dishes themselves

  3. the act or process of assembling or the state of being assembled

  4. a three-dimensional work of art that combines various objects into an integrated whole

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

assemblage Scientific  
/ ə-sĕmblĭj /
  1. A collection of artifacts from a single datable component of an archaeological site. Depending on the site and culture, an assemblage may be associated with a single limited activity, as with stone tools found at a butchering site, or may reflect a broad range of cultural life, as with artifacts that are found in a communal living site.


Other Word Forms

  • reassemblage noun
  • subassemblage noun

Etymology

Origin of assemblage

From French, dating back to 1695–1705; see origin at assemble, -age

Explanation

An assemblage is a bunch of parts, pieces, or people collected together into an organized group, always for some specific purpose. On August 28, 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream” speech in Washington DC to hundreds of thousands of citizens — an assemblage of people who all wanted to end racism. A computer is an assemblage of wires and microchips. An artist who makes sculptures from trash creates assemblages of recycled materials. The word assemblage is related to assembly — which sometimes refers to a gathering in the gymnasium that you’d like to skip.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing assemblage

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

The book includes a vast assemblage of band member recollections as collected by Academy Award-winning director Morgan Neville.

From Salon • Nov. 3, 2025

At Socrates, examples include “A Sea In-MOTION,” a star-shaped assemblage of bamboo fences by the Pioneers Go East Collective; and Natalia Nakazawa’s part-buckyball, part-yurt “Dome Cartographies.”

From The Wall Street Journal • Oct. 17, 2025

The team recommends future research uses a multidisciplinary approach to outline absolute dating, stratigraphic excavation, and paleoenvironmental reconstruction, which they describe as "essential to clarify the temporal depth and functional character of the Ayvalık assemblage."

From Science Daily • Oct. 12, 2025

An exception is a small Loewe bucket bag inspired by Josef’s early glass assemblage experiments when he was a Bauhaus student, which abounds with glass bobbles and haptic surprise.

From Los Angeles Times • Sep. 15, 2025

Nailer and Pima forced their stiff limbs to move and stumbled down to the beach, joining a ragged assemblage of other survivors who were streaming toward the sands.

From "Ship Breaker" by Paolo Bacigalupi