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WITH

With is a preposition used in English to indicate accompaniment, instrument, manner, or association between two entities. It can express that someone is together with another person or thing, e.g., "She arrived with her sister." It can denote the instrument or means by which something is done: "cut with a knife"; or indicate manner or condition: "with great care." It also appears in phrases indicating addition or inclusion: "with all due respect," "with this in mind."

Grammatical notes: With a noun or pronoun phrase after it, forming a prepositional phrase that can modify

Etymology: "With" derives from Old English wiþ, meaning against or toward; over time its sense broadened to

Common usages include: accompanying someone (with Mary), instrumentality (written with a pencil), accompaniment and condition (with

a
verb,
adjective,
or
noun.
It
can
also
appear
in
relative
constructions:
"the
person
with
whom
I
spoke"
or
in
informal
speech
"the
person
I
spoke
with."
In
some
cases
it
introduces
a
participial
phrase:
"With
the
sun
shining,
we
continued."
In
many
idioms,
its
meaning
is
not
strictly
literal.
include
accompaniment
and
association,
in
parallel
with
related
West
Germanic
languages
where
forms
like
German
mit
and
Dutch
met
express
the
same
idea.
permission,
with
difficulty),
and
fixed
expressions
(with
regard
to,
with
respect
to).
It
is
also
used
to
express
conjunctions
of
ideas
in
certain
adverbial
or
participial
constructions,
as
well
as
in
phrases
that
set
the
context
for
a
statement.