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Catalogue Common

Catalogue has 6 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Verb

Definitions
Noun
1

a complete list of things; usually arranged systematically

"it does not pretend to be a catalog of his achievements"

2

a book or pamphlet containing an enumeration of things

"he found it in the Sears catalog"

3

A systematic list of names, books, pictures etc.

"The museum updated its online catalogue to include every painting and photograph in their collection."

In plain English: A catalogue is a list that shows all the items available in a store or library so you can find what you need.

"She kept a small catalogue of all her favorite recipes in a notebook."

Usage: Use catalogue as a noun to refer to a structured list or inventory, such as a library catalog or an art exhibition catalogue. It describes the collection itself rather than the act of listing items.

Verb
1

make an itemized list or catalog of; classify

"He is cataloguing his photographic negatives"

2

make a catalogue, compile a catalogue

"She spends her weekends cataloguing"

3

To put into a catalogue.

"The archivist spent the afternoon carefully cataloguing every artifact in the newly discovered chest."

In plain English: To catalogue something means to make a list of all the items in it.

"The librarian catalogued all the new books for the summer reading list."

Usage: Use the verb catalogue to mean arranging items systematically or listing them with details, such as organizing books in a library or recording observations in a dataset. This action implies creating an organized record rather than simply placing objects physically into a book.

Example Sentences
"She kept a small catalogue of all her favorite recipes in a notebook." noun
"The museum catalogues list every artifact with great detail." noun
"She kept a catalogue of her favorite recipes in the kitchen drawer." noun
"You can find a full price catalogue at the back of this issue." noun
"The librarian catalogued all the new books for the summer reading list." verb
Related Terms
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
list book classify compose
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
discography library catalog parts catalog seed catalog course catalog

Origin

The word catalogue comes from the Ancient Greek kataálogos, which originally meant "enrollment" or "register." It entered English via Old French and Late Latin, carrying with it the sense of making a list by recounting items downwards.

Rhyming Words
gue ague orgue bogue vogue logue gigue digue segue cogue rogue hogue fugue hague togue vague pogue argue bague coigue
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