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Search results for
calling together
We've found
51
phrases for
calling together
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calling card
A prepaid card or credit card, usually electronically readable, used to pay the charges when making a telephone call.
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calling card
A small printed card which identifies the bearer, traditionally presented for introduction when making a social visit to a home or when attending a formal social event or business meeting.
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calling card
An attribute, object, or behavior which is distinctly characteristic of someone or something.
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calling card
Excrement, especially of a domestic animal.
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pot calling the kettle black
A situation in which somebody comments on or accuses someone else of a fault which the accuser shares.
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band together
form a group
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pull together
To unite for a common objective.
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knock together
To assemble something quickly; to knock up.
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fall together
To contract.
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lump together
To put different items or groups together and treat them, or think of them as one single group.
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scrape together
To collect, assemble or gather small amounts , from various sources, with some difficulty.
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put together
To assemble, construct, or build.
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sleep together
To be intimate with another person in the same bed.
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sleep together
To have sex with.
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yoke together
To unite, or join, or combine.
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pull oneself together
To become mentally focused after a period of being unfocused.
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get one's act together
To become serious, organized, worthwhile, etc.
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put one's hands together
To clap; to applaud.
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put your hands together
Clap; applaud.
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birds of a feather flock together
People of similar character, background, or taste tend to congregate or associate with one another.
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birds of the feather flock together
People who are alike physically tend to congregate and socialize together, despite government efforts at forced integration.
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put two and two together
To figure out; to deduce or discern.
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close up
To move people closer together.
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run away with
To leave secretly with another person. Usually with the intention of getting married or of living together against the wishes of the family.
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split up
Cease to be together, break apart from the group.
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pack up
To put back together.
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round up
Together.
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all at once
All at the same time; all together.
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at once
At the same time; simultaneously; together.
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become one flesh
To join together in marriage; to develop a unifying bond as a result of marrying.
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cheek by jowl
In close proximity; crammed uncomfortably close together.
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drop a dime
To make a phone call, usually means calling the police to report another's activities.
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gang up
To join together, as a gang.
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gang up on
To join together in a gang in order to overpower someone else.
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get along
To be together or coexist well, without arguments or trouble.
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hand in hand
Naturally, ordinarily or predictably together; commonly having a correlation or relationship.
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hang by a thread
To be in danger, calling for precise caution. To be in a precarious situation.
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he who smelt it dealt it
(colloquial, originally) A person who calls attention to or complains about a fart is likely trying to pretend it wasn't his or her own.(colloquial, by extension) Used to suggest that a person calling attention to or complaining about a given problem may in fact be the source of the problem.
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in tandem
together
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jack of all trades, master of none
A master of integration, who knows enough from many learned trades and skills to be able to bring their disciplines together in a practical manner; a polymath; a renaissance man.
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knock up
To put together, fabricate, or assemble, particularly if done hastily or temporarily. See also knock together.
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life and limb
Existence together with bodily faculties.
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lucky dip
A game in which prizes are covered up and mixed together in a container, so that contestants can dip their hand into the container and randomly pull out a prize.
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many a mickle makes a muckle
(UK) a lot of small amounts together, become a large amount.
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marry in haste, repent at leisure
Two things together too soon will lead to problems.
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melting pot
Come together and are homogenized.
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play ball
To work together; to cooperate.
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shack up
To live together, especially of an unmarried couple.
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tight-lipped
Having the lips pressed together.
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two heads are better than one
Some problems may be solved more easily by two (or more) people working together than by one working alone.
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