0
Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Looking for a word

I do like the (melodic) word "Loyalty"
Do you know a word like "Loyalty" but for helping someone or helping a firm to reach his economic goals and to be sucessful?
  

Top answer

Anonymous Do you know a word like "Loyalty" but for helping someone or helping a firm to reach his economic goals and to be sucessful? Well, that is not what 'loyalty' means. Support?

  • Anonymous Do you know a word like "Loyalty" but for helping someone or helping a firm to reach his economic goals and to be sucessful?
  • Well, that is not what 'loyalty' means.
  • Support?
  • Encourage?
  • Spur on?
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.

9 Answers
0
AnonymousDo you know a word like "Loyalty" but for helping someone or helping a firm to reach his economic goals and to be sucessful?
Well, that is not what 'loyalty' means. Support? Encourage? Spur on?
0
"loyalty" has nothing to do with streamlining your business. Usually, it's the task of managers or business advisors/counselors.
0
I was creating an account, so i am not "Anonymous" anymore and can reply on my question: "Looking for a word"

@Mister Micawber: I know, "loyalty" means something different but i like "how it sounds". thank you for your suggestions, but it doesent sounds "melodic" enough
0
the support doesent have to be streamlining. it could also be helping to find customers, developing products...
I am looking for a catchy but reliable word
0
Is it a word you've heard before or are you looking for something unfamiliar? Emotion: smile How about assist, aid, help out? I'm not sure what ma
0
Why don't you write the sentence you have in mind and perhaps we''ll be able to find a suitable (and hopefully melodic) word for you?
0
nurture
cultivate
foster
0
Could the word be "lobby" you are looking for?
0
AnonymousI do like the (melodic) word "Loyalty"
A melodic word for you may be torture for other speakers, Anon. Japanese learners, for instance, can hardly pronounce it. A word should be used for its sense, not its sound, unless you are writing poetry.

Related Questions