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  1. Accompanied with or by? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Accompanied "by" something is the idiomatic usage: with something extra to go along with something else; with something to complement something else. Dessert was accompanied by a fine white wine. …

  2. Accompanied by/with - WordReference Forums

    Jan 20, 2010 · I'm not sure 'accompanied with' is always wrong though. According to a grammar website which cites Thomas Bernstein, author of a style guide, "we say "accompanied with [things]" and …

  3. accompanying / accompanied by | WordReference Forums

    Jan 12, 2025 · Hi! I wonder which one is correct in this case between "accompanying" and "accompanied by." "For example, digital networks may make it easier to create efficient technologies …

  4. I was accompanied by my friends "for" or "to" a picnic

    Because accompanied to is so common a collocation with destinations and venues and activities, usages like I was accompanied by my friends for a concert. get interfered with and thus sound marginal.

  5. accompanied by or with - WordReference Forums

    Nov 8, 2006 · Mr. Brian Molestrangler, accompanied by his beautiful wife, Celia, sat down to a delicious meal of roast venison accompanied by a red, fruity, vintage Bordeaux.

  6. accompany to/ for/ on - WordReference Forums

    Jun 21, 2014 · I accompanied my friend to/ for/ on shopping. We use 'to' preposition after the word accompany, when it is about a place but here in case of gerund, what should be the correct …

  7. accompanied or with company? - WordReference Forums

    Apr 3, 2014 · Hello teachers, Can both of them be used in an emergency room by a doctor? a) Have you come here alone or accompanied? b) Have you come here alone or with company? Thanks in advance.

  8. Along With/Accompanied by - WordReference Forums

    May 30, 2009 · Hello, folks. Suppose that there is a conference to be held somewhere along with and a small showroom at the same time, what is the best phrase to connect between the two events? The …

  9. vocabulary - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    When you say "X is accompanied by Y", you put stress on "X", and make it look original, more important. Thus, without any context, it indeed looks as if Y joined X's company and went along or followed.

  10. Children must be accompanied by parents/ a parent.

    Mar 7, 2007 · 1) Children must be accompanied by a parent. 2) Children must be accompanied by parents. How would a native speaker interprete these sentences? If there are three children: A, B, …