collaboration
noun/kəˌlæbəˈɹeɪʃən/
Etymology
Originated 1855–60 from French collaboration, from Late Latin collaboratus + -ion, from Latin con- (“with”) + labōrō (“work”). Morphologically collaborate + -ion.
- derived from con-
- derived from collaboratus
- borrowed from collaboration
Definitions
The act of collaborating.
- Collaboration can be a useful part of the creative process.
- During the interwar period, fascists proposed class collaboration as a response to communist class struggle.
A production or creation made by collaborating.
- The husband-and-wife artists will release their new collaboration in June this year.
Treasonous cooperation.
- He has been charged with collaboration.
The neighborhood
- neighborcollaborate
- neighborcollaborator
- neighborcollaborative
- neighborcollaboratively
- neighboradversarial collaboration
- neighborsocial collaboration
- neighbortelecollaboration
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for collaboration. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA