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[–] 1 pt (edited )

mas·sé /maˈsā/ nounBILLIARDS•SNOOKER noun: massé; plural noun: massés a stroke made with an inclined cue, imparting swerve to the ball. "a massé shot"

You sure?

mass /mas/

noun 1.a coherent, typically large body of matter with no definite shape. "a mass of curly hair"

2.a large number of people or objects crowded together. "a mass of cyclists"

relating to, done by, or affecting large numbers of people or things. "the movie has mass appeal"

assemble or cause to assemble into a mass or as one body. "both countries began massing troops in the region"

[–] [deleted] 3 pts (edited )

you sure?

Yes

en masse ŏn măs′ adverb In one group or body; all together. in a single body or group; together all together

Edit:

Not trying to be a grammar nazi here, just trying to help educate and better understand your point.

The meaning of “en masse,” as the definition says, is a bunch of stuff altogether. Re-reading your initial comment, that may not be what you meant, but if not, it still would be good to better understand the definition.

If you instead meant that he’s been releasing a mass of drops, saying in mass is somewhat misleading….

[–] 1 pt

Shit maybe I was wrong. +1

If we're lucky, we'll learn something new every day.