0 If two or more people get together, they meet each other, having arranged it before: --
1 to start a romantic relationship: --
She got together with Paul two years ago.
2 an informal meeting or social occasion, often arranged for a particular purpose: --
a family get-together
She quickly isolates herself from the other girls, saying that she doesn't need friends, because it's a competition, not a get-together.
The most likely reason for the get-together, they say, would have been to save him in some way from the peril facing him.
We have got to have a great power get-together on a very dangerous change in world society which it is in all our interests to stop.
It is almost a denial of the very things which we have had pleaded to-day in the general appeal for a get-together of all sections of industry.
Surely it is not beyond the wit of man to arrange some sort of get-together on this matter.
It needs to be a bit more than a social get-together.
So this was not simply a get-together by the oil companies alone.
To make such suggestions is not a good way to start a "get-together" and to enlist co-operation.