How to Use stitch together in a Sentence
stitch together
verb-
Any hope stitched together during that stretch came apart just a few minutes later, though.
—Los Angeles Times, 8 Mar. 2026
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Instead, it’s tagged by what was there, even if that was fragments of magic stitched together.
—Ira Gorawara, New York Times, 23 Mar. 2026
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Participants design their own block of the quilt, then they're all stitched together.
—Sharon Chin, CBS News, 8 Apr. 2026
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And most of the features are stitched together by a whole-home automation system.
—David Caraccio may 16, Sacbee.com, 16 May 2026
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The graphic also nods to textiles with a design that appears stitched together.
—Sarah Jones, Footwear News, 22 June 2026
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They were stitched together from random tactics and hopeful guesses.
—Jodie Cook, Forbes.com, 28 May 2026
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Next week, the surface’s seams will be stitched together by a Zamboni-like machine that sews the slabs together.
—Melanie Anzidei, New York Times, 8 May 2026
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Then this team arrived, stitched together almost entirely from somewhere else.
—C.j. Holmes, New York Daily News, 14 June 2026
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Favreau points out that the scene that appears as one continuous shot was very real and not stitched together through the magic of editing.
—Jazz Tangcay, Variety, 22 May 2026
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Houses cling to hillsides as if paused mid-fall, stitched together by cement stairs poured whenever someone had a moment to pause.
—Masha Hamilton, Longreads, 19 Feb. 2026
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His team has made clusters of 36 boron atoms in a thin, atom-thick disk; two could be stitched together to create the boron equivalent of graphene.
—ArsTechnica, 30 June 2026
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Luma designed the agent setup in response to the hodge-podge of different models and tools that get stitched together as part of the creative process.
—Dade Hayes, Deadline, 5 Mar. 2026
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Roughly 2,000 of those are stitched together over several days to create a complete map of the sky.
—Miriam Waldvogel, Washington Post, 30 June 2026
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The online space keeps people stitched together between gatherings.
—Stephanie Hind, Rolling Stone, 5 Jan. 2026
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But, ultimately, the movie has the form of mismatched pieces stitched together and brought to life more willfully than coherently.
—Richard Brody, New Yorker, 4 Mar. 2026
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His couplets—stitched together by a rhyme—typically saunter in contrary directions.
—Literary Hub, 29 Jan. 2026
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An Oakland woman teaches people how to stitch together their own stories of activism and belonging.
—Sharon Chin, CBS News, 8 Apr. 2026
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It’s made from thick leather panels stitched together and turned inside out, for a smoother, more aerodynamic surface, and has a pig’s bladder forming its inner core.
—Adela Suliman, NBC news, 24 June 2026
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In classrooms stitched together from rubble and memories, learning carries a different weight.
—Literary Hub, 20 Feb. 2026
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The sails are united by an image of a sewing needle, stitching together both women’s relationships to their craft and community.
—Chadd Scott, Forbes.com, 26 May 2026
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Using tools only of stone, bone, and shell, Islanders made wooden spears and clubs, and canoes built from planks stitched together with plant fibers and fitted with outriggers.
—Literary Hub, 28 Jan. 2026
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Raven Johnson wore a blazer-style dress stitched together with various patterns and fabrics, including tiny white stars and pinstripes.
—Skyler Caruso, PEOPLE, 14 Apr. 2026
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That step still depends on stitching together signals across systems, often under time pressure and without a consistent way to apply context.
—Anuj Goel, Forbes.com, 29 June 2026
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The post stitched together photos of Bible scripture, Paul crying, pain relief patches and personal notes scrawled through notebooks.
—Emily St. Martin, Los Angeles Times, 6 Apr. 2026
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The resulting image was stitched together using smaller, individual observations and covers an area of the sky that's about as wide as three full moons.
—Michele Laufik, Martha Stewart, 26 Feb. 2026
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In addition to the tent made from the artist’s own clothes, and stitched together by hand, the experience also features video screenings of moments from life in Gaza over the last two years.
—Georg Szalai, HollywoodReporter, 19 Mar. 2026
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Helium first made its name by building an Internet of Things (IoT) network stitched together with hotspots.
—Jack Kubinec, Fortune, 2 June 2026
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But such tools are typically used in isolation, requiring researchers to stitch together results from multiple sources.
—Elie Dolgin, IEEE Spectrum, 4 Feb. 2026
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Also known locally as batakari, the loose-fitting fugu smock is made from handwoven strips of cotton fabric stitched together to form a flowing robe, often worn over trousers and paired with a matching cap.
—ABC News, 23 Feb. 2026
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The half-hour compilation, curated by Lin, stitched together photos and home videos of the girls submitted by loved ones as music softly played in the background.
—Reeti Malhotra may 23, Sacbee.com, 23 May 2026
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'stitch together.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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