different between eachother vs mutual

eachother

English

Etymology

From Middle English ech other, yche othere, ich othir, eche other, ilk oþer, from Old English ?l? ?þer (each other), equivalent to each +? other. More at each other.

Pronoun

eachother

  1. (nonstandard) Alternative spelling of each other
    • 1826, G. H. C. Egestorff (translator), Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock (author), Klopstock's Messiah (Der Messias), canto XIV, lines 94–6, page 427:
      The pilgrims to the heavenly Salem, who / By nature for eachother were design’d, / In this life oft are near, yet do not meet.
    • 1921 April, Charles Johnston, "Tao-Teh-King: An Interpretation of Lao Tse's Book of the Way and of Righteousness", part I (of VIII), in The Theosophical Quarterly, volume XVIII, The Theosophical Society, page 347:
      Lao Tse is seeking to make clear the relation of the unmanifested and the manifested Logos to eachother, as poles of the same Being.
    • 2006, Karunkar Nair, Pebbles in the Sand, Lulu.com, ?ISBN, page 44:
      Our last night together! [] How are we going to cope with the absence of eachother?

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mutual

English

Alternative forms

  • mut. (abbreviation)
  • mutuall (obsolete)

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle French mutuel, from Latin m?tuus.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?mju?t??u?l/

Adjective

mutual (comparative more mutual, superlative most mutual)

  1. Having the same relationship, each to each other.
  2. Collective, done or held in common.
  3. Reciprocal.
  4. Possessed in common.
    • 1809, Faculty of Advocates (Scotland), Decisions of the Court of Sessions, from 1752 to 1808 (page 216)
      On his area the pursuer built a dwelling-house, of which the gable and garden-wall were mutual with his neighbour Smith []
  5. (Relating to a company, insurance or financial institution) Owned by the members.

Synonyms

  • (done or held in common): mutual, shared; see also Thesaurus:joint
  • (reciprocal): reciprocative; see also Thesaurus:reciprocal

Translations

Noun

mutual (plural mutuals)

  1. A mutual fund.
  2. (business, finance, insurance) A mutual organization.
  3. (Internet) Either of a pair of people who follow each other's social media accounts.

Translations

Anagrams

  • umlaut

Romanian

Etymology

From French mutuel

Adjective

mutual m or n (feminine singular mutual?, masculine plural mutuali, feminine and neuter plural mutuale)

  1. reciprocal

Declension

Related terms

  • mutualism
  • mutualitate

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mu?twal/, [mu?t?wal]
  • Rhymes: -al
  • Hyphenation: mu?tual

Adjective

mutual (plural mutuales)

  1. mutual
    Synonym: mutuo

Derived terms

  • mutualidad

Further reading

  • “mutual” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.

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