in tow

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(from Cambridge Dictionary of American English)
definition:

If someone is in tow, they are with someone else:

She arrived with her three children in tow.
___________________

my questions:

1. someone = they?
2. the three children's mother is someone else?
3. what's the diffenence if we say "She arrived with her three children" ,
without adding "in tow"?

thanks!
 
From Dictionary.com

tow1
tr.v. towed, tow·ing, tows
To draw or pull behind by a chain or line: a tugboat towing a barge. See Synonyms at pull.

n.

The act or an instance of towing.
The condition of being towed: a car with a trailer in tow.
Something, such as a tugboat, that tows.
Something, such as a barge or car, that is towed.
A rope or cable used in towing.

Idiom:
in tow
Under close guidance; in one's charge: The new student was taken in tow by a peer counselor.
As a companion or follower: came to dinner with a friend in tow.


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[Middle English towen, from Old English togian. See deuk- in Indo-European Roots.]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
towa·ble adj.
tower n.

Source: The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
 
Anonymous said:
(from Cambridge Dictionary of American English)
definition:

If someone is in tow, they are with someone else:

She arrived with her three children in tow.
___________________

my questions:

1. someone = they?
2. the three children's mother is someone else?
3. what's the diffenence if we say "She arrived with her three children" ,
without adding "in tow"?

thanks!

When a woman (or anybody for that matter) arrives with her children in tow, it's meant to emphasize that the children are a bit of a burden. If you simply say she "arrived with her three children," it's just a statement of fact, but saying they're "in tow" adds an extra sense of its being a burden, as the mental image is one of tow lines between the woman and her children (ie. she has to pull them everywhere she goes).


It doesn't only apply to children, however. A man could arrive at a party with his wife (or vice versa) in tow, and that would have the same "burdensome" overtones that it has with children.
 
Following closely behind and under the control, verbally or physically, of the person ahead
 
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