Another Correct Use of “Comprise”
“Is comprised of” is one of the worst pretentiousisms out there, and one that bugs me the most. Don’t ever say it!
Here’s the rule:
When you’re talking about a whole thing and its parts, compose goes from the parts to the whole, and comprise goes from the whole to its parts.
Here’s a guy who got it right:
OVER 5,000 YEARS AGO IN what is today Slovakia, a Neolithic community erected a new building. It wasn’t the first “longhouse” in Vráble, an early town comprising about 100 buildings in all.
https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/slovakia-neolithic-rotating-buildings
I mentioned this topic before. For more examples, use the search box in the upper right.
Here’s a picture:
PS—Just ran into another correct usage:
Another example is Isabel de Olvera, a free woman of African descent, who in 1600 went on an expedition to New Spain (a region comprising present-day New Mexico, Arizona, Florida and other parts of North and South America), in search of trade goods and new places to settle.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/five-myths/five-myths-about-slavery/2020/02/07/d4cb0e6a-42e0-11ea-b503-2b077c436617_story.html
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