different between mutually vs together
mutually
English
Etymology
mutual +? -ly
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?mjut?u?li/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?mju?t???li/, /-t?w?-/, /-l?/
- Hyphenation: mu?tu?al?ly
Adverb
mutually (comparative more mutually, superlative most mutually)
- in the same way, each to the other; reciprocally
- The contract was mutually binding.
- in a shared manner; equally; affecting all parties the same way
- The adventure was mutually beneficial.
Synonyms
- (in the same way): equivalently, in kind, reciprocally, similarly
- (in a shared manner): collectively, evenly, equally, together; see also Thesaurus:jointly
Translations
mutually From the web:
- what mutually exclusive means
- what mutually exclusive events
- what mutually means
- what's mutually exclusive
- what's mutually assured destruction
- what mutually assured destruction means
- what's mutually inclusive
- what's mutually intelligible
together
English
Alternative forms
- togither (obsolete)
Etymology
From Late Middle English together, from earlier togedere, togadere, from Old English t?gædere (“together”), from Proto-Germanic *t? (“to”) + *gadar (“together”), from Proto-Indo-European *g?ed?- (“to unite, keep”), equivalent to to-2 +? gather. Cognate with Scots togiddir, thegither (“together”), Old Frisian togadera (“together”), Middle Dutch tegadere, tegader (“together”), Middle High German gater (“together”). Compare also Old English ætgædere (“together”), Old English ?eador (“together”). More at gather.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /t????ð.?(?)/, /t????ð.?(?)/
- (US) IPA(key): /t????ð?/, /t????ð?/
- Rhymes: -?ð?(r)
- Hyphenation: to?geth?er
Adverb
together (not comparable)
- At the same time, in the same place; in close association or proximity.
- Into one place; into a single thing; combined.
- In a relationship or partnership, for example a business relationship or a romantic partnership.
- Without intermission or interruption; continuously; uninterruptedly.
- It has been raining four days together
Usage notes
- In an invitation, it is usually implied that the speaker is included in "together". For example,
- Would you like to go to lunch together?
- is equivalent to
- Would you like to go to lunch with me?
Synonyms
- (at the same time): at the same time, concurrently; see also Thesaurus:simultaneously
- (into one place):
- (in a relationship or partnership): collectively, jointly; see also Thesaurus:jointly
- (without intermission or interruption):
Antonyms
- apart
Derived terms
Translations
Adjective
together (comparative more together, superlative most together)
- (colloquial) Coherent; well organized.
- He's really together.
Middle English
Adverb
together
- Alternative form of togidere
together From the web:
- watch together
- https://w2g.tv/
- what togetherness means
- watch together apps
- watch together together movie
- watch together hulu
- watch together hbo max
- watch together disney plus
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- mutually vs together
- mutually vs mutual
- separately vs irrelevantly
- relevantly vs irrelevantly
- interdependent vs interdependently
- extrovert vs inde
- market vs inde
- shop vs inde
- terms vs inde
- louver vs luster
- louver vs screen
- shutter vs louver
- louver vs grill
- lover vs louver
- loover vs louver
- damper vs louver
- taciturn vs austere
- taciturn vs subdued
- taciturn vs stubborn
- uncommunicative vs taciturn