jointly
/ˈdʒɔɪntli/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈdʒɔɪntli/ (ame, ipa)
jointly — 副詞
1. with each person, group, or organization taking an equal share of responsibility
共同
由多人或團體一起做某事
with each person, group, or organization taking an equal share of responsibility or credit for a combined action, decision, or project
The two companies jointly developed a new electric car engine.
那兩家公司共同開發了一種新的電動車引擎。
collocation: jointly + developed (R&D contexts)
Saira and her brother jointly own a small café in Bangkok.
Saira 和她的哥哥在曼谷共同經營一家小咖啡館。
The report was jointly written by researchers from Taiwan and Brazil.
這份報告是由來自臺灣和巴西的研究人員共同撰寫的。
Christopher and Élise jointly decided to move their business online.
Christopher 和 Élise 共同決定將他們的生意轉移到線上。
- together
more general; can describe physical closeness or mere accompaniment, not just shared responsibility
- collectively
emphasises the group acting as a whole rather than the equal share of each individual; slightly more formal
- mutually
focuses on a reciprocal or two-way relationship between the participants, often in agreements or feelings
- in partnership
suggests a formal legal or business arrangement rather than an informal shared action
- separately
each person or group acting on their own rather than together
- individually
each person acting alone rather than as part of a combined effort
- singly
one at a time, without combining efforts; less common in everyday speech
用法筆記
Often appears before a past participle (jointly owned) or before a past-tense main verb. The subject of the sentence must refer to two or more participants — a singular subject cannot act jointly.