Need another word that means the same as “partner”? Find 44 synonyms and 30 related words for “partner” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Partner” are: better half, married person, mate, spouse, collaborator, cooperator, pardner, colleague, associate, co-worker, fellow worker, ally, comrade, companion, teammate, husband and wife, twosome, husband, wife, consort, man, my friend, go with, go along with, travel with, keep someone company, tag along with, escort, chaperone, attend, follow, conduct, lead, take, show, see, guide, steer, usher, pilot, convoy, help, assist, show someone the way
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “partner” as a noun can have the following definitions:
ally | A state formally cooperating with another for a military or other purpose. He was forced to dismiss his closest political ally. |
associate | A person with subordinate membership in a society, institution, or commercial enterprise. A close associate of the Minister. |
better half | Something superior in quality or condition or effect. |
co-worker | An associate that one works with. |
collaborator | Someone who collaborates with an enemy occupying force. His collaborator on the book. |
colleague | A person who is member of one’s class or profession. The surgeon consulted his colleagues. |
companion | A person who shares the experiences of another, especially when these are unpleasant or unwelcome. Steve and his live in companion. |
comrade | (among men) a colleague or a fellow member of an organization. An old college comrade. |
consort | The husband or wife of a reigning monarch. Queen Victoria and her consort Prince Albert. |
cooperator | An associate in an activity or endeavor or sphere of common interest. |
fellow worker | A man who is the lover of a girl or young woman. |
husband | A married man considered in relation to his spouse. She and her husband are both retired. |
husband and wife | A married man; a woman’s partner in marriage. |
man | Human beings in general the human race. The two of them lived for a time as man and wife. |
married person | A person who is married. |
mate | South American tea like drink made from leaves of a South American holly called mate. My best mate Steve. |
my friend | A person who backs a politician or a team etc. |
pardner | An associate in an activity or endeavor or sphere of common interest. I m here with my pardner Tex. |
spouse | A person’s partner in marriage. |
teammate | A fellow member of a team. It was his first start against his former teammates. |
twosome | A game or dance for or involving two people. An inseparable twosome. |
wife | The wife of a person with a specified occupation. He and his wife are keen gardeners. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “partner” as a verb can have the following definitions:
assist | Give help or assistance be of service. They were assisting police with their inquiries. |
attend | Occur with or as a result of. I must attend to this matter. |
chaperone | Accompany as a chaperone. She chaperoned the children at all times. |
conduct | Transmit a form of energy such as heat or electricity by conduction. Conduct an orchestra Barenboim conducted the Chicago symphony for years. |
convoy | (of a warship or armed troops) accompany (a group of ships or vehicles) for protection. The trucks convoyed the cars across the battle zone. |
follow | Come as a logical consequence follow logically. When he lectures I cannot follow. |
go along with | Move away from a place into another direction. |
go with | Be ranked or compare. |
guide | Use as a guide. He guided her to the front row and sat beside her. |
help | Help to some food help with food or drink. I served him three times and after that he helped himself. |
keep someone company | Keep in a certain state, position, or activity. |
lead | Cause something to pass or lead somewhere. There will be specific areas or skills in which other nations lead the world. |
pilot | Be the pilot of an aircraft or ship. The pilot flew to Cuba. |
see | Go to see for professional or business reasons. I could see through the windows. |
show | Show in or as in a picture. A postcard showing the Wicklow Mountains. |
show someone the way | Give expression to. |
steer | Direct (oneself) somewhere. The teacher steered the gifted students towards the more challenging courses. |
tag along with | Attach a tag or label to. |
take | Of a plant or seed take root or begin to grow germinate. Winner takes all. |
travel with | Travel from place to place, as for the purpose of finding work, preaching, or acting as a judge. |
usher | Take (someone) to their seats, as in theaters or auditoriums. The usher showed us to our seats. |
affiliate | A subordinate or subsidiary associate a person who is affiliated with another or with an organization. They affiliated with a national group. |
associate | A person with limited or subordinate membership of an organization. He had to consult his associate before continuing. |
beau | A rich, fashionable young man; a dandy. |
bigamy | The offense of marrying someone while you have a living spouse from whom no valid divorce has occurred. |
cohabit | Exist together. Mary is now cohabiting with Paul. |
colleague | An associate that one works with. The surgeon consulted his colleagues. |
companion | Be a companion to somebody. My companions in misfortune. |
compatriot | A person from your own country. Stich defeated his compatriot Boris Becker in the quarter finals. |
comrade | Used as a term of address for those male persons engaged in the same movement. Comrades in arms. |
conjoin | Join; combine. An approach which conjoins theory and method. |
consort | Agree or be in harmony with. You chose to consort with the enemy. |
couple | Bring two objects, ideas, or people together. A couple of girls were playing marbles. |
estranged | (of a person) no longer close or affectionate to someone; alienated. His estranged wife. |
ex | The 24th letter of the Roman alphabet. All his exes live in Texas. |
fellow | A man who is the lover of a man or woman. There s a fellow at the door. |
friendship | The state of being friends (or friendly. Old ties of love and friendship. |
husband | A married man considered in relation to his spouse. She husbanded their financial resources through difficult times. |
marriage | Two people who are married to each other. A happy marriage. |
married | Married people. Married bliss. |
marry | Perform a marriage ceremony. Eric asked me to marry him. |
mate | South American tea like drink made from leaves of a South American holly called mate. See you then mate. |
morganatic | (of marriages) of a marriage between one of royal or noble birth and one of lower rank; valid but with the understanding that the rank of the inferior remains unchanged and offspring do not succeed to titles or property of the superior. He contracted a morganatic marriage with a German born actress. |
newlywed | Someone recently married. |
peer | A nobleman duke or marquis or earl or viscount or baron who is a member of the British peerage. Faye peered at her with suspicion. |
polygamy | A pattern of mating in which an animal has more than one mate. |
spouse | A husband or wife, considered in relation to their partner. |
suitor | A prospective buyer of a business or corporation. The company agreed to negotiate with its suitor. |
wed | Having been taken in marriage. They were wed in London. |
wife | The wife of a person with a specified occupation. A clergy wife. |
workmate | A fellow worker. |
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