Englishfor English speakers
altogether
Adverb
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You use altogether to emphasize that something was done or happened completely and in every way.
He plans to cut back on smoking slowly and not stop altogether.
The road got smaller and smaller until it disappeared altogether.
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You use altogether to emphasize that something is like a description in every way.
I still dream, but my dreams are altogether different from my teenage dreams.
It is not altogether clear what happened to them in the police car.
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You use altogether to show that a number or amount is the total.
It includes nine new programs: five half-hour sitcoms, one half-hour drama, a half-hour fantasy adventure and two one-hour dramas. Altogether, 5 1/2 hours of new shows will be introduced.
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You use altogether to bring together a number of points that you have talked about.
So each idea is different in some way, but altogether, they seem to point to the same thing.
different
Adjective
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If two or more things are different, they are not like each other, not the same. The two things have two sizes, not both the same size; or they have two shapes, they don't both have one shape; or they each have a color, not just one color for both things; or they are not the like each other in some other way.
The day and night are quite different.
My brother's bike is different from mine.
Examples altogether different examples
How do I use altogether different in a sentence?
Movie subtitles
How very different it would be for the altogether more modest voyages about to be undertaken by a remarkable man from the tiny little European kingdom of Portugal.