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Monday, May 25, 2020

Commonly Confused Words All Together and Altogether

Because you cant depend on your spellchecker  to know the difference between the homophones all together and altogether, you need to be able to tell them apart.   Definitions The phrase all together (two words) refers to people or things gathered in one place or all acting together. The adverb altogether (one word) means entirely, wholly, or in all. Examples They came from all parts of Peru. They had never seen each other before but they were all together now, lined up in front of the cement hulks whose insides they had not yet seen.(Mario Vargas Llosa, The Time of the Hero, trans. by Lysander Kemp. Grove Press, 1966)I saw I was losing the conversation, if in fact I had not already lost it altogether.(Maya Angelou, Mom Me Mom. Random House, 2013)When 50 Elvis impersonators appeared all together at Windsor Palace, the queen observed that this was altogether inappropriate. Usage Note All together is used only in sentences that can be rephrased so that all and together may be separated by other words:-   The books lay all together in a heap.-  All the books lay together in a heap.( 100 Words Almost Everyone Confuses and Misuses. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2004) The Lighter Side of Altogether and All Together Ted Striker: I flew single engine fighters in the Air Force, but this plane has four engines. Its an entirely different kind of flying  altogether. Rumack and Randy  [together]:   Its an entirely different kind of flying.(Airplane! 1980) Practice Exercise (a) The clowns stood ______ at the front of the chapel. (b) Despite their painted smiles, the clowns sorrow was ______ clear. Answers to Practice Exercises (a) The clowns stood  all together  at the front of the chapel. (b) Despite their painted smiles, the clowns sorrow was  altogether  clear.

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