What is another word for got around?

Pronunciation: [ɡɒt ɐɹˈa͡ʊnd] (IPA)

The phrase "got around" is a commonly used idiom that refers to the act of spreading information or traveling from place to place. There are several synonyms that can be used to replace this phrase, depending on the context of the sentence. For example, the phrase "circulated" can be used to mean the same thing as "got around," particularly when discussing the spread of information or news. Other synonyms for "got around" include "spread," "traveled," "wandered," and "roamed." These words can be used interchangeably with "got around" to add variation and interest to your writing or speech.

Synonyms for Got around:

What are the hypernyms for Got around?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Got around

  • I've got around 400 cookbooks.
    Heston Blumenthal
  • Drugs were pretty easy to quit taking. I was never addicted to anything to begin with. But then, liquor - I had to wait about another six years before I finally got around to quitting that. I'm sure glad I did.
    Alex Chilton
  • Copernicus published his manuscript in 1543 just in time for the council of Trent. So you're a church father and what this new system of Copernicus is saying is this: The Earth moves, although the Bible says it doesn't. It's no longer at the center of God's universe, although the Bible says it is. It's a planet, so heaven and Earth are no longer separate. And Aristotle was wrong, although church authority depends on him being right. You're a church father and you pick up this subversive, heretical, revolutionary piece of lunacy and you start foaming at the mouth, right? Wrong. When the council finally got around to reading Copernicus they were delighted. His new system had made calendar reform more precise. And the business of it turning every basic belief about the universe on its head? A mere fairytale since from the church's viewpoint he was talking nonsense. Astronomy drew lines and circles in the sky but they weren't really there, they're a mathematical convenience for measuring or teaching astronomy. While the Copernicus system might well have been brilliant mathematics, no one thought for a minute that he was actually suggesting the earth was whizzing around the sun. That kind of talk would blow holes in everything.
    James Burke (science historian)
  • when I got around to read Plato, I found that he reinforced and copper-fastened the notion which experience had already rather forcibly suggested, that direct attempts to overcome and enlighten ignorance are a doubtful venture; the notion that it is impossible, as one of my friends puts it, to tell anybody anything which in a very real sense he does not already know
    Plato
  • If movement conservatism is less about hating the state than about fighting Godless modernism, this might explain why conservatives have always found actual or cultural wars to fight, but have never got around to shrinking or controlling the growth of government (though centrists like Eisenhower and Clinton did).
    Mark Riebling

Word of the Day

Chases sign
The term "Chases sign" refers to a linguistic phenomenon known as synonymy, wherein multiple words or phrases are used interchangeably to convey a similar meaning. Synonyms for "Ch...