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Definition of Concerted
1. Adjective. Involving the joint activity of two or more. "Joint military activities"
Definition of Concerted
1. a. Mutually contrived or planned; agreed on; as, concerted schemes, signals.
Definition of Concerted
1. Verb. (past of concert) ¹
2. Adjective. Performed through a concert of effort; done by agreement or in combination. ¹
3. Adjective. (music) Having separate parts for voices and instruments ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Concerted
1. concert [v] - See also: concert
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concerted
Literary usage of Concerted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Readings in Descriptive and Historical Sociology by Franklin Henry Giddings (1906)
"In other words, the consciousness of kind converts a spontaneous like-response
into a Concerted Volition. Subjective Conditions. ..."
2. Inductive Sociology: A Syllabus of Methods, Analyses and Classifications by Franklin Henry Giddings (1901)
"Modes of Concerted Volition: Like-mindedness When the simultaneous-like responses
of a plural number of individuals have developed through the consciousness ..."
3. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1918)
"This evidence supports the charge that defendants were induced to break their
contracts by their concerted action and agreement among themselves to haul ..."
4. A Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High Treason and ...by Thomas Bayly Howell, William Cobbett by Thomas Bayly Howell, William Cobbett (1816)
"... concerted with regard to the murder bei» л lie pannel and Allan Breck, but,
... that no such »V"ff was or could be concerted betwixt them я;» the ..."
5. The Sociology of a New York City Block by Thomas Jesse Jones (1904)
"CHAPTER IX Concerted VOLITION IT could not be expected that in a ... These few,
however, are so far indicative of the origins of concerted volition in its ..."
6. Brahms by John Alexander Fuller-Maitland (1911)
"CHAPTER V Concerted MUSIC IF we allowed ourselves to feign a total annihilation
of all the music of Brahms with the exception of one single class of his ..."