Language/English/Vocabulary/Altogether-and-all-together
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Revision as of 12:02, 10 May 2020 by Safasamimiat (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Altogether and all together''' '''"Altogether" means ‘completely’ or 'considering everything'.''' Examples: My new house is not altogether finished. Altogether,...")
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Altogether and all together
"Altogether" means ‘completely’ or 'considering everything'.
Examples:
My new house is not altogether finished.
Altogether, she decided, marriage was a bit of a mistake.
Altogether can also be used to give totals.
Example:
That’s £4.38 altogether.
All together usually means ‘everybody/everything together’.
Examples:
Come on, everybody sing. All together now . . .
They all went to the cinema together.