Accompany in a sentence as a verb

"Now we've wasted $10,000 as we dont have the article to accompany the efforts.

"On Demo Day we accompany each startup's name with a brief summary of what they're doing.

You will also find some songbooks for purchase and some free video lessons to accompany them.

They don't provide sources for the photographs or the captions that accompany them.

Namely, roadway design needs to accompany speed limits to ensure people actually drive the desired speeds.

But we used to still accompany our female friends back home.> In certain regions of India, you will find bribes to be business as usual.

The most memorable quote was "In the US, it is usually typical for a husband to accompany his wife to the hospital when she gives birth".

It is normal here in Canada for a husband to accompany his wife to the hospital, and has been at least since I was born in the 80s. I think refurb's point is that it's strange to include that in something you give a Canadian moving to the US.

What makes enterprise products hard to sell is that they're difficult to sell passively; you need account managers, and with them the 6 month sales cycle and 6 figure price tag that accompany them.

Otherwise curing Malaria can result later in all the problems that accompany a lack of resources: bigger famines, increased civil strife and warfare.

Although the documentation meant to accompany the engine has long been lost, the team is confident that they can apply recently developed scanning techniques to discover how it worked.

The input given was a very limited sales presentation with a couple screen shots and a few accompany statements from the founder that they presented to a VC and that the VC recited their entire pitch to them.

But why should Palantir get a free pass to go about their business with excessive secrecy in an area that features massive abuse without the additional scrutiny that must accompany such behavior?

I know phonologistspeople who are trained in the study of human speech categorieswho have an extremely difficult time discerning between [k] and [k].Peter Ladefoged, one of the worlds foremost phoneticians, has a fantastic website to accompany his phonetics textbook and it has recordings of all the sounds known to be produced in human languages.

Accompany definitions

verb

be present or associated with an event or entity; "French fries come with the hamburger"; "heart attacks are accompanied by distruction of heart tissue"; "fish usually goes with white wine"; "this kind of vein accompanies certain arteries"

verb

go or travel along with; "The nurse accompanied the old lady everywhere"

verb

perform an accompaniment to; "The orchestra could barely follow the frequent pitch changes of the soprano"

See also: follow

verb

be a companion to somebody

See also: company companion