¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Cohabiting
1. cohabit [v] - See also: cohabit
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cohabiting
Literary usage of Cohabiting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Roman Private Law in the Times of Cicero and of the Antonines by Henry John Roby (1902)
"Neither a mother cohabiting with her son's slave nor a patroness cohabiting with
her freedman's slave loses her status, notwithstanding notice by the owner. ..."
2. Lawyers' Reports Annotated by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company (1916)
"On я trial of two persons for lewdly and lasciviously abiding and cohabiting with
each other, an instruction that omits the words "lewdly and lasciviously" ..."
3. Pagan Races of the Malay Peninsula by Walter William Skeat, Charles Otto Blagden (1906)
"... who accuse them of devouring their own dead and of cohabiting with the beasts
of the forest.1 ORANG LAUT OR SEA-JAKUN. Oran? Laut, S'letar. ..."
4. Church Life in Colonial Maryland by Theodore Charles Gambrall (1885)
"There was, however, much cohabiting, and the vestry had occasion frequently to
sit as a court for the trial of such persons. Their power did not extend ..."
5. The Development Decade?: Economic and Social Change in South Africa, 1994-2004 by Vishnu Padayachee (2007)
"By comparison, the needs of married and cohabiting couples have been neglected,
... many infections occur within marital and cohabiting unions, ..."
6. United States Supreme Court Reports by Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company, United States Supreme Court (1886)
"... or any person cohabiting with more than one woman, and no woman cohabiting
with any of the persons described as aforesaid in this section," etc., ..."