Join in a sentence as a noun

But Manning joined the club, broke its rules.

Every day the recruitment ads state 'change the world - join our social dog teeth brushing cloud service'.

In an ominous sign, no Pashtun will join the "national" Afghan army.

I didn't join for the six-figure salary - I turned down other offers that paid more at the time.

The conversation has been known to continue:SG: "You should join our company as chief growth hacker, since it's a great fit for your skills and experience.

He must be on the interstate, judging from the road gradient we can hear.- Dick joins from his laptop, where the microphone is conveniently part of the same physical device as the keyboard.

Join in a sentence as a verb

My > experience here has been incredibly transformative: I joined > Facebook after dropping out of college having never faced the > challenges that I've seen during my time here.

During one surreal leadership presentation where hundreds of people joined via a web meeting and many more were present in person, someone forgot to lock down presenter rights, and people kept drawing on the slides.

But I'd just like to say that it's so awesome to live in a time when we can start a topic of conversation about someone of note, and there's a chance that this individual will join the conversation personally.

An application to join the European Union has been filed by the Icelandic government but it is generally considered to be a first step in negotiations as opposed to being a commitment to join.-- Iceland did not go bankrupt.

We become intimately familiar with his three-year-old daughter's escapades with Cheerios and love of Phineas & Ferb.- Judging from the number of sirens, Jake apparently lives in a bad part of town or is watching Blues Brothers in the background.- Lucy has apparently joined while sitting in a conference room, attending another meeting simultaneously.- Robert joins 15 minutes late and would like everything he missed to be recapped.- Mark absolutely will not let the meeting progress unless someone is recording.

Join definitions

noun

the shape or manner in which things come together and a connection is made

See also: articulation joint juncture junction

noun

a set containing all and only the members of two or more given sets; "let C be the union of the sets A and B"

See also: union

verb

become part of; become a member of a group or organization; "He joined the Communist Party as a young man"

verb

cause to become joined or linked; "join these two parts so that they fit together"

verb

come into the company of; "She joined him for a drink"

verb

make contact or come together; "The two roads join here"

See also: conjoin

verb

be or become joined or united or linked; "The two streets connect to become a highway"; "Our paths joined"; "The travelers linked up again at the airport"

See also: connect link unite