togetherish
English
editEtymology
editAdjective
edittogetherish (comparative more togetherish, superlative most togetherish)
- Indicative or characteristic of togetherness or being together; togetherly.
- 1992, Richard Kenneth Barksdale, Praisesong of Survival:
- We are also asking for a new humanism that will revive a healthy individualism in what has become a crowded, urbanized, "togetherish" society.
- 2002, Stephen Sandy, Surface Impressions:
- Salads are chatty, sociable, so togetherish at a lamplit table, everyone (or two) taking helpings.
- 2004, Merle Thornton, After Moonlight:
- If things pan out, if it is on the right footing, maybe I could even think about more of him than that, something more togetherish.
- 2013, Janet Taylor Lisle, Looking for Juliette:
- The Lambert clan was togetherish, as Georgina frequently complained. “You should tell your family that you are a person witha life of your own!” she advised Poco.
- Somewhat together.
- 1942, William Davidson, Brother Goose:
- They still look awful togetherish.
Adverb
edittogetherish (comparative more togetherish, superlative most togetherish)
- In a togetherish or somewhat together manner.
- 1982, Ezra Pound, Brita Lindberg-Seyersted, Pound/Ford, the Story of a Literary Friendship:
- I have hopes then that we might go there together - or at any rate togetherish as to boats - in September.