accompanied
ac·com·pa·ny
A0042700 (ə-kŭm′pə-nē, ə-kŭmp′nē)These verbs mean to be with or to go with another or others. Accompany suggests going with another on an equal basis: "One day [my wife] accompanied me, upon some household errand, into the cellar of the old building which our poverty compelled us to inhabit" (Edgar Allan Poe).
Conduct implies guidance of others: "A servant conducted me to my bedroom" (Charlotte Brontë).
Escort stresses protective guidance or official action: "At every county town a long cavalcade of the principal gentlemen ... escorted the mayor to the market cross" (Thomas Macaulay).
Chaperone specifies adult supervision of young persons: My mother helped chaperone the prom.
Adj. | 1. | accompanied - having companions or an escort; "there were lone gentlemen and gentlemen accompanied by their wives" |
2. | accompanied - playing or singing with instrumental or vocal accompaniment |