¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cogeners
1. cogener [n] - See also: cogener
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cogeners
Literary usage of Cogeners
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1887)
"... and assert that it has an immense superiority over its cogeners, in its perfect
innocuousness in the strongest doses. It is prompt in action, ..."
2. Footprints of the Creator: Or the Asterolepis of Stromness by Hugh Miller (1872)
"It is, however, in the head of the flounder and its cogeners that we find the
more extraordinary distortions exemplified. In order to accommodate it to the ..."
3. The Testimony of the Rocks: Or, Geology in Its Bearings on the Two by Hugh Miller (1871)
"... the wild cat, the roe, and the red deer, we find the remains of great animals,
whose cogeners must now be sought for in the intertropical regions. ..."
4. English Drama by Felix Emmanuel Schelling (1914)
"... its cogeners and its outcomes, this book must be from the nature of the case,
concerned, in the main, with that form and variety of written speech which ..."
5. An Autobiography: My Schools and Schoolmasters; Or, The Story of My Education by Hugh Miller (1855)
"But these plants kept far aloof, in their green depths, from their cogeners the
monocotyledons of the terrestrial flora. ..."
6. Foods and Their Adulteration: Origin, Manufacture, and Composition of Food by Harvey Washington Wiley (1917)
"For instance, that constituent largely present in milk, namely, nitrogen or casein
and its cogeners, while theoretically almost the same in any of the milks ..."
7. The Cruise of the Betsey: Or, a Summer Ramble Among the Fossiliferous by Hugh Miller (1858)
"... and amplitude enough of base, to serve a mountain thrice as tall, but which,
like all its cogeners of this ancient formation, was arrested in its second ..."