What is another word for closely associated?

Pronunciation: [klˈə͡ʊslɪ ɐsˈə͡ʊsɪˌe͡ɪtɪd] (IPA)

Closely associated is a term often used to describe a relationship between two things that are closely connected or linked. However, there are many other synonyms that can be used to effectively describe this type of relationship. Some alternatives include interrelated, interconnected, intertwined, correlated, connected, interdependent, and dependent. Each of these words can be used in a similar context to "closely associated" to convey the idea that two things are closely linked or dependent on each other. When writing, it's important to choose the most appropriate synonym for the context in order to convey the intended meaning clearly and effectively.

What are the hypernyms for Closely associated?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Closely associated

  • I think cinema, movies, and magic have always been closely associated. The very earliest people who made film were magicians.
    Francis Ford Coppola
  • In human history, the desire for revenge and the desire for loot have often been closely associated.
    John McCarthy
  • Seeking an English equivalent for peinture relative, Fritz Glarner settled on the term 'relational painting' towards the end of 1946, which he applied retrospectively to some of his earlier paintings and all his subsequent works. It was a term that suited the kind of abstract painting he pursued, focused on relating geometric shapes and ground through colour in ways which would make shape and ground alternate to produce what he called 'pumping planes'. While acknowledging the influence of Piet Mondrian (1872-1944), with whom he was closely associated in New York, Glarner replaced the balancing of horizontality and verticality achieved in Mondrian's painting with interlocking rectangles and wedges that expand out towards the edges of the canvas.
    Dore Ashton
  • A distinction does not have to be clear to be important, and, at some point, there is a common-sense dividing line between procedural and violent conflict. Violence is most closely associated with conquest as a form of conflict settlement, though violence is descriptive of a conflict process rather than of a conflict settlement. It is quite possible, for instance, for conquest to be nonviolent, that is, for one party to be absorbed in another or for one organization to be dissolved by strictly procedural means. Departments are organized out of existence, countries are federated or united, organizations are laid down, and firms are bankrupted by purely procedural processes, without more than perhaps a trace of legal coercion lurking in the background.
    Kenneth Boulding
  • As for the general idea of what one would do if certain of death in an hour—I fancy most persons in normal health tend to sentimentalise and romanticise a bit about it. For my part—as a realist beyond the age of theatricalism and naive beliefs—I feel quite certain that my own known last hour would be spent quite prosaically in writing instructions for the disposition of certain books, manuscripts, heirlooms, and other possessions. Such a task would—in view of the mental stress—take at least an hour—and it would be the most useful thing I could do before dropping off into oblivion. If I finish ahead of time, I'd probably spend the residual minutes getting a last look at something closely associated with my earliest memories—a picture, a library table, an 1895 Farmer's Almanack, a small music-box I used to play with at 2 ½, or some kindred symbol—completing a psychological circle in a spirit half of humour and half of whimsical sentimentality. Then—nothingness, as before Aug. 20, 1890.
    H. P. Lovecraft

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