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accompany
[ uh-kuhm-puh-nee ]
verb (used with object)
- to go along or in company with; join in action:
to accompany a friend on a walk.
- to be or exist in association or company with:
Thunder accompanies lightning.
- to put in company with; cause to be or go along; associate (usually followed by with ):
He accompanied his speech with gestures.
- Music. to play or sing an accompaniment to or for.
verb (used without object)
- to provide the musical accompaniment.
accompany
/ əˈkʌmpənɪ; əˈkʌmpnɪ /
verb
- tr to go along with, so as to be in company with or escort
- trfoll bywith to supplement
the food is accompanied with a very hot mango pickle
- tr to occur, coexist, or be associated with
- to provide a musical accompaniment for (a performer)
Derived Forms
- acˈcompanier, noun
Other Words From
- non·ac·com·pa·ny·ing adjective
- re·ac·com·pa·ny verb (used with object) reaccompanied reaccompanying
Word History and Origins
Origin of accompany1
Word History and Origins
Origin of accompany1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
During the course of the Nakba, the removal of Palestinians from their lands was accompanied by the renaming of sites and often by planting trees on the sites of villages, terraced fields and olive groves.
Mr Headley, who was accompanied by his solicitor, was not asked to enter pleas on the two charges against him.
As a child, I accompanied my mother to buy ingredients for Nigerian dishes in Upton Park, an area of East London known for its South Asian community.
Even when Israeli and international activists accompany villagers to their olive groves, hoping to deter the threat, there’s no guarantee of safety.
By contrast, “Gangplank Galleon,” which accompanies the game’s climactic pirate ship boss fight, begins in the frisky style of an accordion-led sea shanty.
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