along
Americanpreposition
-
through, on, beside, over, or parallel to the length or direction of; from one end to the other of.
to walk along a highway; to run a border along a shelf.
-
during; in the course of.
Somewhere along the way I lost my hat.
-
in conformity or accordance with.
I plan to revise the article along the lines suggested.
adverb
-
by the length; lengthwise; parallel to or in a line with the length or direction.
He ran along beside me.
-
with a progressive motion; onward.
The police ordered the line to move along.
-
(of time) some way on.
along toward evening.
-
in company; in agreement (usually followed bywith ).
I'll go along with you. He planned the project along with his associates.
-
as a companion; with one.
She took her brother along.
-
from one person or place to another.
The order was passed along from the general to the captain and from the captain to a private.
-
at or to an advanced place or state.
Work on the new ship is quite far along.
-
as an accompanying item; on hand.
Bring along your umbrella.
-
Chiefly Southern U.S. and British Dialect. along of,
-
owing to; because of.
We weren't invited, along of your rudeness.
-
in company with.
You come along of me to the store.
-
verb phrase
idioms
-
all along, all the time; throughout.
I knew all along that it was a lie.
-
be along, to arrive at a place; come.
They should be along soon.
preposition
adverb
-
continuing over the length of some specified thing
-
in accompaniment; together with some specified person or people
he says he'd like to come along
-
forward
the horse trotted along at a steady pace
-
to a more advanced state
he got the work moving along
-
accompanying; together with
consider the advantages along with the disadvantages
Etymology
Origin of along
First recorded before 900; Middle English; Old English andlang, equivalent to and- (cognate with Old Saxon, Old Norse and-, Gothic and(a)-, Old High German ant-; akin to Greek antí- and Latin ante-, prefix with the original sense “opposite, facing”) + lang ; long 1. answer
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.