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accompanying

[ UK /ɐkˈʌmpənɪɪŋ/ ]
[ US /əˈkəmpəniɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. occurring with or following as a consequence
    the resultant savings were considerable
    snags incidental to the changeover in management
    collateral target damage from a bombing run
    an excessive growth of bureaucracy, with attendant problems
    attendant circumstances
    the period of tension and consequent need for military preparedness
    the ensuant response to his appeal

How To Use accompanying In A Sentence

  • Accompanying the exclusion from the labour market has been a policy of disenfranchising the underclass from full welfare citizenship.
  • The orchestrated escort and the accompanying police violence in clearing the picket reflected the involvement of city based police, the local constabulary having been cooperative with the workers.
  • About 7 o'clock tonight, we had a whopping great thunderstorm with accompanying light show, and the flipping garage got flooded again!
  • Or you reach for the accompanying booklet to have a whole lot of stuff about psionics and sigils explained. Times, Sunday Times
  • The precis accompanying the weekly summaries of incidents also make it possible to explore in more detail the deaths of individual policemen.
  • An accompanying book becomes a bestseller. Times, Sunday Times
  • The term smirting fulfils this requirement, but the new habit, and accompanying new word, may not end there. Times, Sunday Times
  • More homegrown products to enjoy include the legendary heroes of Lucha Libre: those uniquely Mexican wrestling creations who shifted their considerable weight from the lucha ring to the silver screen, and the accompanying lobby cards for their unabashedly shlocky movies are quite often classics. The lurid artistry of the Mexican lobby card
  • The accompanying labels says "One of the principal uses of the adz was in hollowing out dug-out canoes. Archive 2009-04-01
  • There are grunts, an accompanying triangle, and even something like be-bop drums.
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