into or in one gathering, company, mass, place, or body: to call the people together.
into or in union, proximity, contact, or collision, as two or more things: to sew things together.
into or in relationship, association, business, or agreement, etc., as two or more persons: to bring strangers together.
taken or considered collectively or conjointly: This one cost more than all the others together.
(of a single thing) into or in a condition of unity, compactness, or coherence: to squeeze a thing together; The argument does not hold together well.
at the same time; simultaneously: You cannot have both together.
without intermission or interruption; continuously; uninterruptedly: for days together.
in cooperation; with united action; conjointly: to undertake a task together.
with mutual action; mutually; reciprocally: to confer together; to multiply two numbers together.
adjective
Slang. mentally and emotionally stable and well organized: a together person.
Origin of together
First recorded before 900; late Middle English, variant of earlier togedere, togadere, Old English tōgædere; cognate with Old Frisian togadera; see origin at to, gather
words often confused with together
See altogether.
Words nearby together
togate, togated, Togaviridae, toga virilis, togavirus, together, togetherness, together with, togger, toggery, toggle
simultaneously, jointly, closely, collectively, unitedly, calm, cool, stable, well-balanced, well-adjusted, well-organized, combined, commonly, en masse, hand in glove, hand in hand, mutually, side by side, unanimously, concurrently