Dad will accompany the first graders on their field trip.
Her husband wasn't able to accompany her to the awards banquet, so she took her brother instead.
OOSHIScenes of devastation accompanied Sherman's march to the sea.
The first lady accompanied the president to the meeting.
Spasmodic flashes of light and booming thunderclaps were accompanied by torrential rain.
I did not wish to leave the impression that I had accompanied my colleagues on this incredible journey merely to seek to brighten their waking hours with badinage.
Yes u can for example: Accompanied with the chaperon, the students went on a field trip to the museum.
I did not wish to leave the impression that I had accompanied my colleagues on this incredible journey merely to seek to brighten their waking hours with badinage.
Too is a synonym of also. Either is accompanied by or in a sentence. This means that when you use either you mean one or the other, and when you use too you mean both. These words are not the same.
'Mr Ram, accompanied by his friends, was assembled at the lawn' would be grammatically correct.
During the long journey to his new order, the friar accompanied a group of veteran knights. To make amends for his past, the disgraced nobleman became a Dominican friar.
The first lady accompanied the president to the meeting.
Because the indefinite article 'a' means any one of a kind or group. In this sentence you are not talking about one cyclone, but any cyclone, cyclones in general. Also cyclones is plural. So you use zero article.If you said 'A cyclone is generally accompanied .............' then that is ok.This applies to the other nouns precipitation and weather.
The brave knight was only accompanied by his page. I have only this jacket to help me brave the cold.