Pronunciation: /dʒɔɪn ðə dɑts/
noun a word that represents a person, place, thing, or idea
A1 I like to join the dots in my activity book.
A2 Children often enjoy joining the dots to reveal a picture.
B1 Joining the dots is a simple yet engaging way to improve fine motor skills.
B2 As a therapeutic activity, patients are encouraged to join the dots to relax and focus.
C1 Some artists use the technique of joining the dots to create intricate designs.
C2 The puzzle required the player to join the dots in a specific sequence to solve it.
verb a word that expresses an action or state of being
A1 I can join the dots to reveal the hidden picture.
A2 Children love to join the dots in their activity books.
B1 In order to understand the bigger picture, you need to join the dots.
B2 The detective was able to solve the case by joining the dots of the evidence.
C1 The researcher spent months joining the dots of various studies to form a comprehensive theory.
C2 The journalist was skilled at joining the dots between different events to uncover a major scandal.
preposition a word that shows the relationship between a noun (or pronoun) and other words in a sentence
A1 I like to join the dots on paper to create pictures.
A2 Children often enjoy joining the dots to reveal a hidden image.
B1 In order to solve the puzzle, you need to join the dots correctly.
B2 The instructions were unclear, so I had trouble joining the dots.
C1 She has a talent for joining the dots and seeing the bigger picture.
C2 As a detective, he was able to join the dots and solve the case quickly.
article a word that is used to specify or limit a noun
A1 I like to join the dots in my activity book.
A2 Children often enjoy joining the dots to reveal a hidden picture.
B1 The detective had to join the dots to solve the mystery.
B2 In order to understand the complex issue, we need to join the dots and look at the bigger picture.
C1 The analyst was able to join the dots between the different pieces of evidence.
C2 The researcher spent years joining the dots of historical data to uncover a new theory.
formal In order to understand the full picture, one must carefully join the dots.
informal If you want to get what's going on, just join the dots.
slang Dude, stop being clueless and just join the dots.
figurative By analyzing the data points, we can start to join the dots and see the patterns emerge.
joined
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have joined the dots
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joined the dots