joint effort

joint effort
Synonyms and related words:
bipartisanship, coaction, coadjuvancy, coadministration, coagency, cochairmanship, codirectorship, collaboration, collaborativeness, collectivism, collusion, commensalism, common effort, common enterprise, communalism, communism, communitarianism, community, complicity, concert, concord, concordance, concurrence, cooperation, cooperativeness, duet, duumvirate, ecumenicalism, ecumenicism, ecumenism, esprit, esprit de corps, fellow feeling, fellowship, harmony, joining of forces, joint operation, mass action, morale, mutual assistance, mutualism, mutuality, octet, pooling, pooling of resources, pulling together, quartet, quintet, reciprocity, septet, sextet, solidarity, symbiosis, synergism, synergy, team spirit, teamwork, trio, triumvirate, troika, united action

Moby Thesaurus. . 1996.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • joint effort — index coaction, collusion, conformity (agreement), conjunction, connivance, conspiracy Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. B …   Law dictionary

  • joint effort — team effort, cooperative project …   English contemporary dictionary

  • joint — [dʒɔɪnt] adjective [only before a noun] shared by, owned by, or involving two or more people, organizations, or countries: • The companies made a joint statement last night. • The two men were appointed joint managing directors in June. • The two …   Financial and business terms

  • joint — I UK [dʒɔɪnt] / US adjective [only before noun] *** involving two or more people, or done by them together a joint bank account a joint decision The two presidents issued a joint statement. My sister and I had a joint birthday party. joint… …   English dictionary

  • effort */*/*/ — UK [ˈefə(r)t] / US [ˈefərt] noun Word forms effort : singular effort plural efforts Metaphor: When you put a lot of effort into doing something, it is like using a part of your body. Does she have the backbone to stand up to them? Or will she… …   English dictionary

  • joint — joint1 [ dʒɔınt ] adjective only before noun *** involving two or more people or done by them together: The two presidents issued a joint statement. a joint decision a joint bank account My sister and I had a joint birthday party. joint favorite …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • joint — 1 adjective (only before noun) 1 shared, owned by, or involving two or more people or groups: a joint bank account | joint first prize | joint army and airforce operations 2 joint effort a situation in which two or more people work together: “Who …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • joint — /joynt/, n. 1. the place at which two things, or separate parts of one thing, are joined or united, either rigidly or in such a way as to permit motion; juncture. 2. a connection between pieces of wood, metal, or the like, often reinforced with… …   Universalium

  • effort — ef|fort W1S1 [ˈefət US ˈefərt] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(physical/mental energy)¦ 2¦(attempt)¦ 3 be an effort 4¦(particular situation)¦ 5 good/bad/poor etc effort ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: esfort, from esforcier to force ] 1.) …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • joint — joint1 W2 [dʒɔınt] adj [only before noun] [Date: 1300 1400; : French; Origin: , past participle of joindre; JOIN] 1.) involving two or more people or groups, or owned or shared by them ▪ The two ministers have issued a joint statement . ▪ Both… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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