All align synonyms
a·lign
A a verb align
- line up — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
- join — to bring in contact, connect, or bring or put together: to join hands; to join pages with a staple.
- coordinate — If you coordinate an activity, you organize the various people and things involved in it.
- adjust — When you adjust to a new situation, you get used to it by changing your behaviour or your ideas.
- regulate — to control or direct by a rule, principle, method, etc.: to regulate household expenses.
- cooperate — If you cooperate with someone, you work with them or help them for a particular purpose. You can also say that two people cooperate.
- agree — If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion.
- associate — If you associate someone or something with another thing, the two are connected in your mind.
- range — the extent to which or the limits between which variation is possible: the range of steel prices; a wide range of styles.
- fix — to repair; mend.
- order — an authoritative direction or instruction; command; mandate.
- straighten — make straight
- follow — to come after in sequence, order of time, etc.: The speech follows the dinner.
- sympathize — to be in sympathy or agreement of feeling; share in a feeling (often followed by with).
- ally — A country's ally is another country that has an agreement to support it, especially in war.
- affiliate — An affiliate is an organization which is officially connected with another, larger organization or is a member of it.
- bring into line — a mark or stroke long in proportion to its breadth, made with a pen, pencil, tool, etc., on a surface: a line down the middle of the page.
- side with — one of the surfaces forming the outside of or bounding a thing, or one of the lines bounding a geometric figure.
- support — to bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for.
- sympathise — to be in sympathy or agreement of feeling; share in a feeling (often followed by with).