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Synonyms

simultaneously

American  
[sahy-muhl-tey-nee-uhs-lee] / ˌsaɪ məlˈteɪ ni əs li /

adverb

  1. at the same time.

    By moving the chicken coop every day, we simultaneously provide the birds with fresh food and sanitary living conditions.


Other Word Forms

Etymology

Origin of simultaneously

simultaneous ( def. ) + -ly

Explanation

Use the adverb simultaneously to describe actions that occur at the same time. You are reading this sentence and simultaneously learning a new word! Simultaneously doesn’t have to describe two different actions. It just means that things are happening at the same time. If a presidential debate is broadcast simultaneously on three television channels, “broadcast” is the only action but it’s happening in three places at once.

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Vocabulary lists containing simultaneously

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Cook “are almost comically irreconcilable as a matter of logic,” argues Mark in a piece that explains how the justices simultaneously expanded executive power while insulating the one agency it appears to truly value.

From Slate • Jul. 2, 2026

The judge called Alberto, who missed work to attend the hearing, along with three other cases simultaneously, and spent only minutes on each.

From Los Angeles Times • Jul. 1, 2026

The last man to simultaneously lead England in all three formats was Andrew Strauss, in 2009.

From BBC • Jun. 30, 2026

Wang's visit comes less than two weeks after EU leaders tasked the European Commission with tackling the issue through talks with Beijing -- while simultaneously preparing beefed-up defence measures to protect key sectors.

From Barron's • Jun. 29, 2026

And as he cut himself adrift, both from them and simultaneously from that other world he had known before them, he marveled: What an awful thing the truth is, and how comforting is a lie.

From "The Best of Enemies" by Osha Gray Davidson

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