0
Carlene Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Difference between all together and altogether.. How do you use them correctly?

I'm totally ambivalent to choose as to which one of these sentences is correct....

a.) Let us altogether pray for him.

b.) Let us all together pray for him.

pls. explicate afterwards..!!!
  

Top answer

All together is an adverb and means everyone or everything together. It's time to sing. All together now!

  • All together is an adverb and means everyone or everything together.
  • It's time to sing.
  • All together now!
  • The last time we were all together was in 1999.
  • Put the bills all together on the desk.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0

All together is an adverb and means everyone or everything together.

It's time to sing. All together now!

The last time we were all together was in 1999.

Put the bills all together on the desk.



Altogether is an adverb and means "all in all," "all told," or "completely."

That was altogether too difficult.

Altogether,

Related Questions