unapart
English
Etymology
Adverb
unapart (comparative more unapart, superlative most unapart)
- Not apart; together.
- 1910, Agnes Lee, The Border of the Lake, page 65:
- As, afar, yet ever unapart, / His great heart Calls the world.
- 1926, Voices, page 152:
- Parallel, unapart, — The billowy glide down from the wind's crest; At last, the nest.
- 2011 October 19, Alfred Colo, Calendar Cuts, Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN, page 46:
- What a part we'd have played, unapart, had we stayed. What April fools we were then!