At the same time, meantime, in the meantime
these were all i could think of,
Loosely translated, "meanwhile" means "at the same time." For example, "Tom was waiting for Joan. Meanwhile, he tied his shoe and called Pete on his cell phone." The word "meanwhile" indicates that the person is doing one thing while waiting for another. "I'm an actor. I just auditioned for a movie. Meanwhile, I'm working in a restaurant as a waiter."
The word ''meanwhile'' is an adverb itself!
Another word is but
another word for very large
what is another word for included
Meanwhile.
The word meanwhile is an adverb. It is the time between events.
The word "meanwhile" has three syllables.
yes because a compound word is two words put together and meanwhile is mean and while put together is meanwhile this might help a lot more better MEAN+WHILE=MEANWHILE
Loosely translated, "meanwhile" means "at the same time." For example, "Tom was waiting for Joan. Meanwhile, he tied his shoe and called Pete on his cell phone." The word "meanwhile" indicates that the person is doing one thing while waiting for another. "I'm an actor. I just auditioned for a movie. Meanwhile, I'm working in a restaurant as a waiter."
Meanwhile, the cat was busy licking her fur. She has meanwhile immersed herself in yet another book.
No, "meanwhile" is not a preposition. It is an adverb that is used to show something happening at the same time as something else.
Teddy was sick, meanwhile, Tutu was laying her eggs
Yes, it is.
Interea.
Loosely translated, "meanwhile" means "at the same time." For example, "Tom was waiting for Joan. Meanwhile, he tied his shoe and called Pete on his cell phone." The word "meanwhile" indicates that the person is doing one thing while waiting for another. "I'm an actor. I just auditioned for a movie. Meanwhile, I'm working in a restaurant as a waiter."
The nanny went for a walk meanwhile the children stayed home