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Discover LudwigThe phrase "accompanied from" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct phrase is "accompanied by," which is used to indicate that something or someone is present along with another.
Example: "The presentation was accompanied by a detailed report that outlined the findings."
Alternatives: "together with" or "along with".
Exact(10)
A small chamber ensemble also accompanied from time to time.
He's accompanied from his car each morning by an armed security guard.
She is accompanied from time to time by a local boy (Robert Bailey Jr.) and a talking cat (Keith David).
The president noted in his diary that he was accompanied from Weathersfield by a "party of the Hartford light horse".
They meet in a dedicated mentoring room first thing every morning and are accompanied from lesson to lesson by their mentors.
The sudden rise of a severe headache, with nausea, vomiting, ophtalmoplegia, altered consciousness and accompanied from onset or later by visual symptoms and/or hypopituitarism must raise the clinical suspicion of a pituitary apoplexy [4, 50].
Similar(50)
All along his way delegations of churches, even from places off his route, accompanied him from town to town.
He accompanied singers from Frank Sinatra to Linda Ronstadt.
Mr. Pitters accompanied them from Delores Lewis's house.
Mr. Dennis, a photojournalist, accompanied Marines from Echo Company on a 2009 push in southern Afghanistan.
JOHN SHANKS, FIFE The paper that accompanied me from sixth form to university to work.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com