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Discover LudwigThe phrase "altogether touched" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a feeling of being emotionally affected or moved by something.
Example: "After hearing her heartfelt story, I was altogether touched by her resilience and strength."
Alternatives: "deeply moved" or "completely affected".
Exact(1)
But the home isn't altogether touched by the prayer.
Similar(59)
And over the next few days, I uncharacteristically picked at my food, forcing a couple of spoons of breakfast granola and yogurt into my system just to eat something, neglecting lunch altogether, and scarcely touching dinner.
Clark was very smart, but he hadn't waited even to finish high school, and he had altogether lost touch with his family.
So, Rafael Nadal won't win four Grand Slam tournaments in a row, which saves us from the ridiculous debate over that accomplishment compared to a real Grand Slam, accomplished in one calendar year, but his departure from the Australian Open on Wednesday gave tennis something else altogether: a touch of nobility.
A streetball legend, Joe Hammond, who is better known by his nickname the Destroyer, said the New York rims were so tricky that he became focused on having his shots avoid them altogether, refusing to count points if the ball touched steel.
When I wasn't being sexualized, which was a different misogynistic issue altogether, I was being verbally pestered or physically touched.
Shortly afterwards the church planned to destroy the arches altogether but the municipal authorities intervened, threatening anyone who touched them with the death penalty.
Altogether, meteorologists said more than 25 tornadoes may have touched down across middle America late Thursday and early Friday, but Arkansas was the hardest hit.
A minor-key comedy about six Londoners leading lives of quiet desperation, it is rueful, funny, touching and altogether wonderful.
Signature Theater's Peter Norton Space, 555 West 42nd Street, Clinton, (212 279-4200.( Genzlinger) * 'PRIVATE FEARS IN PUBLIC PLACES' Alan Ayckbourn's 67th play, a minor-key comedy about six Londoners leading lives of quiet desperation, is rueful, funny, touching and altogether wonderful.
(Genzlinger) * 'PRIVATE FEARS IN PUBLIC PLACES' Alan Ayckbourn's 67th play, a minor-key comedy about six Londoners leading lives of quiet desperation, is rueful, funny, touching and altogether wonderful.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com