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alliance
1[ uh-lahy-uhns ]
noun
Synonyms: affiliation, partnership, bloc, combination, coalition, association
- a formal agreement or treaty between two or more nations to cooperate for specific purposes.
- a merging of efforts or interests by persons, families, states, or organizations:
an alliance between church and state.
- the persons or entities so allied.
- marriage or the relationship created by marriage between the families of the spouses.
- correspondence in basic characteristics; affinity:
the alliance between logic and metaphysics.
Alliance
2[ uh-lahy-uhns ]
noun
- a city in NE Ohio.
Alliance
1/ əˈlaɪəns /
noun
- the Social Democratic Party and the Liberal Party acting or regarded as a political entity from 1981 to 1988
- ( as modifier )
an Alliance candidate
alliance
2/ əˈlaɪəns /
noun
- the act of allying or state of being allied; union; confederation
- a formal agreement or pact, esp a military one, between two or more countries to achieve a particular aim
- the countries involved in such an agreement
- a union between families through marriage
- affinity or correspondence in qualities or characteristics
- botany a taxonomic category consisting of a group of related families; subclass
Other Words From
- inter·al·liance noun adjective
- nonal·liance noun
- preal·liance noun
- proal·liance adjective
- real·liance noun
- subal·liance noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of alliance1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
In small human societies, for thousands of years, there were shifting alliances and status hierarchies, people who were good to cooperate with and people who most people ostracized.
TikTok responded by beginning negotiations with potential buyers, the most likely of included Oracle and a rival alliance of Microsoft and Walmart.
Part of that work includes Ryan’s CEO Action for Diversity and Inclusion, an alliance of some 1,200 CEOs who are working collaboratively on inclusion issues in their workforce.
They include alliances with companies like Adidas and Lego and star designers like Tom Dixon and Virgil Abloh.
Aggressive interactions and alliances help determine which hyenas are on top, and all individuals know where they stand, Strauss says.
First, one fights with another, then they make an alliance, then they go back to fighting each other.
But with GOP governors slashing budgets across the country, can this odd alliance last?
The book details his confrontations with neoconservatives, and his alliance with Condoleezza Rice.
He entered in an awkward alliance with Lapid to join the government but quickly distanced himself from it.
That alliance between the spy agency and the military, forged in Iraq, would forever change the way America fights wars.
But this alliance is rotten, and cannot endure; the Western men are no partizans of slavery.
Perhaps, like father, I am a snob at heart and liked the sensation of a sort of artistic alliance with the British aristocracy.
He heard Mohammedans alluding to a Brahmin as a leader—so might a wolf and a snake make common alliance against a watch dog.
They accepted baptism as a sort of sacred pledge of friendship and alliance with the French.
Such an alliance was not to be tolerated for a moment, in connection with the last scion of his name and race.
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More About Alliance
What is an alliance?
An alliance is the act or state of being in a mutually beneficial relationship to work toward a common goal, as in The United States’ longest alliance is with France.
Often, alliance refers to a formal agreement between nations that promise to assist each other in war, as in Germany, Italy, and Japan agreed on an alliance during World War II.
Alliance can also be used more generally to refer to the people or groups that come together in a common cause, as in The invading orcs were defeated by an alliance of men, elves, and dwarves.
Alliance is similar to words such as confederation, union, and league, which also refer to beneficial partnerships. Alliance is used more generally than these words, however.
Example: The kids at my school formed an alliance to stop the bully from harassing us.
Where does alliance come from?
The first records of the word alliance come from around 1250. It ultimately comes through the Old French alier, meaning “to ally.” An alliance is created when multiple groups or people decide to ally (join in partnership) with each other.
You have probably seen the word alliance used in history books, especially when learning about wars. Throughout history, nations have repeatedly formed alliances to avoid war or to help defend each other from a larger, more powerful threat. Both World War I and World War II involved alliances between a significant number of nations. In fact, World War I only escalated as badly as it did thanks to a complex web of alliances that forced many different countries into the conflict.
Did you know … ?
What are some other forms related to alliance?
- interalliance (noun, adjective)
- nonalliance (noun)
- prealliance (noun)
- proalliance (adjective)
What are some synonyms for alliance?
What are some words that share a root or word element with alliance?
What are some words that often get used in discussing alliance?
How is alliance used in real life?
Alliance is a word used to refer to partnerships or different parties working together toward a common goal.
BREAKING: NATO chief says alliance suspends meetings with Russia, puts "entire cooperation under review."
— The Associated Press (@AP) March 5, 2014
@Telefonica is driving climate change in the #RaceToZero. Join the @UNFCCC #RaceToZero, the largest global alliance racing to halve emissions by 2030. https://t.co/3pbdpWWApN @topnigel @gmunozabogabir @aloksharma_rdg pic.twitter.com/SdhGCHS1PE
— Exponential Roadmap Initiative (@exponentialroad) June 15, 2021
The alliance between economy and technology ends up sidelining anything unrelated to its immediate interests.
— Pope Francis (@Pontifex) June 18, 2015
Try using alliance!
True or False?
An alliance is a cooperative partnership where multiple parties work toward a common cause.
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