adj
(rare) Able to be accompanied.
adj
Having accompaniment; being part of a group of at least two.
n
Someone or something that accompanies.
n
Alternative spelling of accompanist [(music) The performer in music who takes the accompanying part.]
n
(business) A fellow business professional who acts as a moderating influence and mentor
n
A group of people joined temporarily to accomplish some task or take part in some organised collective action.
adj
Obsolete form of affiliated. [Associated, related, or united; subject to a particular affiliation.]
n
A person associated with another, usually in a subordinate position; a colleague.
adj
Associated, related, or united; subject to a particular affiliation.
n
(countable) A helper; an assistant.
n
An alliance of factions.
v
(obsolete) To connect or unite by alliance; to ally.
n
One who favors and/or forms an alliance.
n
(obsolete, rare) An ally; a confederate.
n
Obsolete form of alliance. [(uncountable) The state of being allied.]
n
(figuratively) Fusion, marriage, combination.
v
(transitive, theater, slang) To support by donating money.
n
(obsolete) apprenticeship
n
(UK, law) An adult, such as a parent, guardian, or social worker, whose role is to safeguard the interests of young people detained by the police, and who must be present at such interviews.
n
Abbreviation of association. [(uncountable) The act of associating.]
adj
Helping; lending aid or support; auxiliary.
n
One who assists; an assistant or helper.
n
(law) Alternative form of assister [One who assists; an assistant or helper.]
n
Abbreviation of association. [(uncountable) The act of associating.]
n
Abbreviation of associate. [A person united with another or others in an act, enterprise, or business; a partner.]
n
(law) Abbreviation of associate. [A person united with another or others in an act, enterprise, or business; a partner.]
adj
(obsolete) sociable; companionable
n
(slang) An associate's degree.
adj
(of a company) connected or amalgamated with another company.
n
(uncountable) The act of associating.
n
A self-regulatory movement in the 1920s in which community members assumed a duty of mutual obligation to support each other.
n
A person who or thing that associates.
n
Abbreviation of assistant. [(obsolete) Someone who is present; a bystander, a witness.]
n
That which accompanies or follows.
n
(Ireland, slang, historical) A member of the Auxiliary Division of the Royal Irish Constabulary.
n
(military) An alliance or coalition.
n
The state or role of being bedfellows.
v
(transitive, dated) To act as a friend to, to assist.
n
One who sits on the same bench as another.
n
A schoolfellow; an associate in studying.
n
A partner in a business context (as opposed to a partner in the sense of a personal relationship).
n
A small group of people specially trained for a particular purpose or profession.
n
(uncommon) An accomplice; a partner.
n
(linguistics, Relational Grammar) An actant that has been 'demoted' to a less salient syntactic position, such as the agent of a passive clause.
n
A number of close friends who usually do things together as a group.
n
A fellow member of a clan.
n
(dated) clientele; customers or patrons
n
Alternative spelling of coworker. [Somebody with whom one works.]
n
(figuratively) A comrade.
adj
Mutually assisting or operating; helping.
adj
Rendering mutual aid; coadjutant.
n
(archaic) A joint venture or partnership.
n
An associate in an act; a coworker.
n
A temporary group or union of organizations, usually formed for a particular advantage.
v
To jointly assist or to provide an additional source of assistance.
n
(politics) Cooperation between politicians of opposing political parties; especially, in France, between a President and Prime Minister.
n
A person who cohabits with another
n
One who labors with another; an associate in labor.
n
A person who works with others towards a common goal.
v
To unite or associate with another or with others.
n
Abbreviation of comrade (as a title) [A mate, companion, or associate.]
n
An association or alliance of people for some common purpose.
n
A member of the same group as another.
n
The act of eating together.
n
The condition of being a fellow-commoner.
n
A community or fellowship.
n
(obsolete) Association; company.
n
Obsolete form of companion. [A friend, acquaintance, or partner; someone with whom one spends time or accompanies]
adj
(obsolete) companionable; sociable
v
(obsolete) To associate with.
adj
(obsolete) companionable; sociable
n
Obsolete spelling of company [A group of individuals who work together for a common purpose.]
n
(figuratively) A thing or phenomenon that is closely associated with another thing, phenomenon, or person.
n
The condition of being a companion (a knight of the lowest rank in certain orders).
n
(rare) A female companion.
n
The role or status of companion.
v
(transitive, intransitive, archaic) To associate with as a companion; to act as a friend to.
adj
Befitting a companion.
n
The state of being a journeyman.
v
(archaic, transitive) To accompany, keep company with.
n
Obsolete form of copartner. [A joint partner (in a business).]
n
(obsolete) The equal or peer of someone else; a close companion or associate.
n
(obsolete) Partner, associate, one working with another toward a common goal.
n
(obsolete) An accomplice; a supporter.
n
A mate, companion, or associate.
n
(military) A fellow combatant or soldier.
n
Obsolete form of comrade. [A mate, companion, or associate.]
n
(obsolete) Synonym of conciergerie.
n
(obsolete) A fellow citizen.
n
A colleague or fellow, especially a professional one.
n
Alternative spelling of confrere [A colleague or fellow, especially a professional one.]
v
(obsolete, intransitive) to associate, partner
n
(uncountable) Intimate companionship or fellowship; (countable) an instance of this.
v
(intransitive) To associate or keep company (with).
adj
(obsolete) Suitable for association or companionship.
n
(biology) One of the organisms that associates with another species in consortism.
n
One who consorts or associates.
n
(obsolete) fellowship; association; companionship
n
(India) The relationship between consorts.
n
An association or combination of businesses, financial institutions, or investors, for the purpose of engaging in a joint venture.
n
The condition of a consort; fellowship; partnership.
n
(informal) A tyrant or manipulator.
n
(obsolete) a participant in a feast or banquet
n
Association for mutual benefit, such as for purposes of production or purchase.
n
One who cooperates; an associate.
n
One who engages in coopetition; a competitor who also cooperates.
n
A joint partner (in a business).
n
(obsolete) associate, companion, comrade
n
(obsolete) An associate or companion; a friend; a partner.
n
A circle of people who associate with one another for a common purpose.
n
(obsolete) union; combination; a coupling; a pair
n
A clique that shares common interests or activities.
n
The practice of two or more parties jointly purchasing all or part of a butchered cow and dividing the meat between them.
n
(figuratively) Something created along with something else, at the same time.
n
(informal) A trusted companion or partner in a criminal organization.
n
Obsolete form of comrade. [A mate, companion, or associate.]
adj
Of, pertaining to or providing custody, especially of a child
n
The legal right to take care of something or somebody, especially children.
n
One's companion for social activities or occasions.
n
The role or status of a dilettante.
n
Skill or ability in being a doorman.
v
(obsolete) To match, pair up, or combine.
n
(politics) An informal alliance or friendly understanding between two states.
n
Alternative form of fere (“companion, friend, mate”) [(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.]
n
Obsolete form of fere (consort or spouse). [(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.]
n
Pronunciation spelling of fellow. [(chiefly in the plural, also figuratively) A companion; a comrade.]
n
(chiefly in the plural, also figuratively) A companion; a comrade.
n
(US) One who sympathizes with the aims or beliefs of an organization without belonging to it; most often applied to a Communist sympathizer.
n
(Cambridge University) A student at Cambridge University who commons, or dines, at the Fellows' table.
adj
Like a comrade; companionable; on equal terms.
adj
Fellowlike; companionable, sociable or sympathetic.
n
Alternative spelling of fellow man [A kindred member of humanity.]
n
(dated) Company, companions; a group of people or things following another.
n
Obsolete form of fellowship. [A company of people that share the same interest or aim.]
n
(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.
n
(obsolete) Companionship.
v
(transitive) To establish filiation between.
n
One who follows mentally, adherer to the opinions, ideas or teachings of another, a movement etc.
n
A person who fraternizes.
n
A voluntary association.
n
(alt-right, Internet slang) A fellow, a comrade
n
An associate who provides assistance.
n
Any of various early types of life insurance or mutual support associations.
n
The Quakers; the Society of Friends.
n
A professional or official position.
n
(obsolete) A companion in arms, fellow, comrade.
n
A group of politicians united in furtherance of a political goal.
n
The attitudes, behaviours, and actions associated with being a gatekeeper (one who guards or controls access to a given area).
n
An association or group of individuals sharing common beliefs, attitudes, and tastes; a fellowship.
n
(historical) A companion to an athel or king in medieval England; a thegn; a comrade
adj
Having the rank of a gesith (member of the king's retinue) in medieval England; well-born.
n
The act of teaching someone, often for advancement at work.
n
A number of things or persons being in some relation to one another.
n
Alternative form of hail-fellow [An intimate companion.]
n
(obsolete, rare) An equal; a fellow; mate.
adj
In a manner befitting a headmaster.
n
Either an associate government or non-government entity or agency that supplements the works of a larger organization or agency by helping to carry out institutional arrangements in line with the larger organization's goals and objectives.
n
Obsolete form of inferior. [A person of lower rank, stature, or ability to another.]
n
Collectively, the intelligence agencies of a country or alliance.
n
The role or status of interlocutor.
adj
Associated with others, be a participant or make someone be a participant (in a crime, process, etc.)
n
The art, character, or position, of a jockey; the personality of a jockey.
n
A group of men assembled for some common purpose; a club, or cabal.
n
A group or association of cooperating members.
n
(obsolete) Union by league; alliance.
n
(UK) A confidential register of people forbidden to work with children, maintained by the Department of Education and Skills.
n
(law) Synonym of next friend
n
(obsolete) An accomplice; partner; comrade.
n
(UK, dated, derogatory) the lower classes in society
adj
Having or showing the qualities of a master vis-a-vis a dependent or subordinate; authoritative; domineering.
n
A mate; a boon companion.
n
(countable, whaling, obsolete) A type of contract between ships to cooperate and share the proceeds of an expedition.
n
A female mediator; a mediatrix.
n
A person who has a subservient nature.
n
(obsolete) Communion; participation; companionship.
n
Obsolete spelling of mone [(obsolete) Communion; participation; companionship.]
n
The condition of having more than one partner.
n
Participant in a mutual enterprise that resembles a partnership but may not have such a formal structure.
n
A candidate for membership of a group, especially a fraternity, sorority, or secret society.
n
Any group of people with common interests.
n
(US, especially medicine) Synonym of trainee: a new employee undergoing a probation period of training and evaluation ("orientation").
n
(by extension) A (ceremony for the) recognition of some achievement.
n
The state or position of being a painter.
n
(education) The act of forming pairs to compare each other's answers to an exercise.
n
(archaic) An ally or spokesman; someone who speaks in support of someone else.
n
(informal, dialect, chiefly US, chiefly as a term of address) A partner.
n
A partner or accomplice.
n
A member of a business or law partnership.
n
(informal, humorous) A close associate.
adj
Related to or in the style of a partner, or a partnership (particularly in business)
n
An association of two or more people to conduct a business
n
A comrade; a companion; an associate.
n
(obsolete) An intimate associate; a companion.
n
(dated) playmate; companion for someone (especially children) to play with.
n
(rare) The state or duration of being playfellows; camaraderie between children.
n
The role or status of playmate.
n
Alternative spelling of plus one [A friend or date whom one brings along to an event; a guest of a guest.]
n
The state or business of a poligar.
n
(obsolete) A private friend; a confidant.
n
The state of being a probationer; novitiate.
n
Obsolete form of pewfellow. [One who occupies the same pew as another.]
n
(rare, nonce word) A person who is a member of the same race or ethnic group as a given other person.
n
The state or business of a reeve.
n
Connection or association; the condition of being related.
n
The establishing of a relationship with a new partner
n
Synonym of reform school
n
A person who serves as an example, whose behavior is emulated by others.
n
The state or relationship of being roommates.
n
One who supports another in a contest or combat, such as a dueller's assistant.
adj
Higher in rank, dignity, or office.
n
A group having a particular allegiance in a conflict or competition.
n
(business) A partner who is not actively involved in the running of a business.
n
(UK) A high-ranking bureaucrat, particularly one who is elitist and deliberately obscure.
n
(obsolete, derogatory, nonce word) A messmate; a companion.
v
(obsolete) To associate.
n
(botany) A plant community.
n
An associate; a fellow of an academy, etc.
n
A senior member of a twelve step or similar program assigned to a guide a new initiate and form a partnership with him.
n
(idiomatic) An unusual combination or political alliance.
adj
Useful in an inferior capacity.
n
A group of people who informally support each other over a problem which all members share.
n
A person who provides moral or physical support to another; an attendant participating in a ceremony or procession.
n
The role or status of tablefellow.
n
(figuratively) A group of two or more people, machines etc. working together; close collaboration.
adj
Associated with others in a team
n
The condition, faculty, or practice of working as a team; collaboration; teamwork
adv
In a relationship or partnership, for example a business relationship or a romantic partnership.
n
A country that another country does business with, usually on a regular basis.
n
The condition of being a tyro or beginner; apprenticeship.
n
A coalition among seemingly antagonistic groups, especially if one is religious, for ad hoc or hidden gain. (See examples.)
n
(uncountable, archaic, euphemistic) Sexual intercourse.
n
The status or office of valet.
n
The state or business of a victualler.
n
The status, pursuits, or occupation of a virtuoso.
n
The behaviours and practices of warlords.
n
The state of being a warrior.
n
A fellow wayfarer; one who accompanies another during a journey.
n
The state, condition, or role of a worker.
n
One engaged in the same work with another; a companion in work.
n
A companion; a fellow labourer, a person who works at the same task as another.
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