[ UK /pˈɑːtnɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈpɑɹtnɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who is a member of a partnership
  2. an associate in an activity or endeavor or sphere of common interest
    the musician and the librettist were collaborators
    sexual partners
  3. a person's partner in marriage
VERB
  1. provide with a partner
  2. act as a partner
    Astaire partnered Rogers
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How To Use partner In A Sentence

  • If this approach has a drawback, it is that the zealous pursuit of the founding principle—disinterring the buried life, stamped under the sod by conniving male partners—sometimes obscures the fact that not a great deal gets added to the wider cultural landscape it is bent on illuminating. A Far From Model Marriage
  • She would have taken a great deal of trouble that her daughters might not be a flounce behind the fashions, and was so far-seeing in her motherly anxieties, that she junketed herself and Major Buller to many an entertainment, where they were bored for their pains, that the extensive acquaintance might ensure to the girls partners, both for balls and for life when they came to require them. Six to Sixteen: A Story for Girls
  • My writing partner is a violent, chauvinistic semi-literate adolescent.
  • Designed and built by hiveMODULAR partner Bryan Meyer and his wife, Anne Ryan, this little woodland getaway is a great example of how versatility makes small spaces livable. Jason Sahler | Inhabitat
  • In fact, the longest continuing presence is often the audit partner.
  • You need financial security and the support of a loving partner to cope with those demands. The Sun
  • Her partner deceives her, but she doesn't know it; her children fail, but she is told they succeed; she believes she has the admiration of others, but they laugh at her behind her back.
  • During the last year, two-thirds had remained faithful to a single partner.
  • The partners' duties A vital component of a partnership is the mutual trust between partners.
  • But they may still serve a basis for some generalisation when the issue of ‘partnership’ is brought into question.
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