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together

to·geth·er
T t

Transcription

    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • UK Pronunciation
    • UK IPA
    • [tuh-geth -er]
    • /təˈgɛð ər/
    • /təˈɡeðə(r)/
    • US Pronunciation
    • US IPA
    • [tuh-geth -er]
    • /təˈgɛð ər/

Definitions of together word

  • adverb together into or in one gathering, company, mass, place, or body: to call the people together. 1
  • adverb together into or in union, proximity, contact, or collision, as two or more things: to sew things together. 1
  • adverb together into or in relationship, association, business, or agreement, etc., as two or more persons: to bring strangers together. 1
  • adverb together taken or considered collectively or conjointly: This one cost more than all the others together. 1
  • adverb together (of a single thing) into or in a condition of unity, compactness, or coherence: to squeeze a thing together; The argument does not hold together well. 1
  • adverb together at the same time; simultaneously: You cannot have both together. 1

Information block about the term

Origin of together

First appearance:

before 900
One of the 4% oldest English words
before 900; late Middle English, variant of earlier togedere, togadere, Old English tōgædere; cognate with Old Frisian togadera. See to, gather

Historical Comparancy

Parts of speech for Together

noun
adjective
verb
adverb
pronoun
preposition
conjunction
determiner
exclamation

together popularity

A common word. It’s meaning is known to most children of preschool age. About 97% of English native speakers know the meaning and use the word.
Most Europeans know this English word. The frequency of it’s usage is somewhere between "mom" and "screwdriver".

together usage trend in Literature

This diagram is provided by Google Ngram Viewer

Synonyms for together

adj together

  • alive and kicking — If you say that someone or something is alive and kicking, you are emphasizing not only that they continue to survive, but also that they are very active.
  • all in all — You use all in all to introduce a summary or general statement.
  • all there — having his or her wits about him or her; of normal intelligence
  • all together — in chorus, in unison
  • as a whole — If you refer to something as a whole, you are referring to it generally and as a single unit.

adv together

  • all at once — If something happens all at once, it happens suddenly, often when you are not expecting it to happen.
  • arm in arm — If two people are walking arm in arm, they are walking together with their arms linked.
  • coincidentally — You use coincidentally when you want to draw attention to a coincidence.
  • collectively — formed by collection.
  • communally — used or shared in common by everyone in a group: a communal jug of wine.

adverb together

  • adjacent — If one thing is adjacent to another, the two things are next to each other.
  • close — When you close something such as a door or lid or when it closes, it moves so that a hole, gap, or opening is covered.
  • combined — A combined effort or attack is made by two or more groups of people at the same time.
  • concertedly — contrived or arranged by agreement; planned or devised together: a concerted effort.
  • concurrently — occurring or existing simultaneously or side by side: concurrent attacks by land, sea, and air.

adjective together

  • balanced — A balanced report, book, or other document takes into account all the different opinions on something and presents information in a fair and reasonable way.
  • conjointly — In a conjoint manner; jointly or together.
  • connected — If one thing is connected with another, there is a link or relationship between them.
  • cool — Something that is cool has a temperature which is low but not very low.
  • coolheaded — not easily flustered; calm

Antonyms for together

adv together

  • abnormally — not normal, average, typical, or usual; deviating from a standard: abnormal powers of concentration; an abnormal amount of snow; abnormal behavior.
  • antagonistically — acting in opposition; opposing, especially mutually.
  • antithetically — in an antithetical way
  • apart — When people or things are apart, they are some distance from each other.
  • apiece — If people have a particular number of things apiece, they have that number each.

adj together

  • alone — When you are alone, you are not with any other people.
  • anti-social — Someone who is anti-social is unwilling to meet and be friendly with other people.
  • avantgarde — the advance group in any field, especially in the visual, literary, or musical arts, whose works are characterized chiefly by unorthodox and experimental methods.
  • cliquish — If you describe a group of people or their behavior as cliquish, you mean they spend their time only with other members of the group and seem unfriendly towards people who are not in the group.
  • diacritic — a sign placed above or below a character or letter to indicate that it has a different phonetic value, is stressed, or for some other reason

adjective together

  • diffused — Simple past tense and past participle of diffuse.
  • divorced — Cut off, or separated.
  • eremetic — Of or pertaining to eremites, reclusive, isolated.
  • exclusory — Having the power or the function of excluding.
  • individual — a single human being, as distinguished from a group.

adverb together

  • disjointly — In a disjointed state.
  • dissimilarly — In a dissimilar way; differently.
  • incompatibly — In an incompatible manner.
  • negatively — expressing or containing negation or denial: a negative response to the question.
  • oppositely — situated, placed, or lying face to face with something else or each other, or in corresponding positions with relation to an intervening line, space, or thing: opposite ends of a room.

Top questions with together

  • when do luke and lorelai get together?
  • f is for friends who do stuff together?
  • how to get your shit together?
  • i love it when a plan comes together?
  • what god has joined together?
  • how to get your life together?
  • timmy thomas why can t we live together?
  • why can t we live together?
  • how many bachelor couples are still together?
  • how to put two pictures together?
  • how to get my life together?
  • when do monica and chandler get together?
  • how long were the beatles together?
  • when do chandler and monica get together?
  • why can t conductors generate static electricity when rubbed together?

See also

Matching words

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