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Definition of Coincident
1. Adjective. Occurring or operating at the same time. "A series of coincident events"
Similar to: Synchronal, Synchronic, Synchronous
Derivative terms: Co-occurrence, Co-occurrence, Coincide, Coincide, Coincidence, Concur, Concurrence, Simultaneity, Simultaneousness
2. Adjective. Matching point for point. "Coincident circles"
Definition of Coincident
1. a. Having coincidence; occupying the same place; contemporaneous; concurrent; -- followed by with.
2. n. One of two or more coincident events; a coincidence.
Definition of Coincident
1. Adjective. (context: of two events) Occurring at the same time. ¹
2. Adjective. (context: of two objects) Being in the same location. ¹
3. Adjective. Being in accordance, matching. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Coincident
1. [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Coincident
Literary usage of Coincident
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Evolution, racial and habitudinal by John Thomas Gulick (1905)
"coincident Election Illustrated. Any form of election when introduced and protected
from failure by variation and selection I call "coincident election. ..."
2. Development and Evolution: Including Psychophysical Evolution, Evolution by by James Mark Baldwin (1902)
"In view of the application of the principle pointed out above, the writer, on
the contrary,includes not only 'coincident' but also correlated variations. ..."
3. Journal of the Statistical Society of London by Statistical Society (Great Britain) (1874)
"... so far from being coincident with the districts of greatest popula- " tion,
greatest trade, and greatest activity and enterprise, is in " point of fact, ..."
4. Essays on the Principles of Morality: And on the Private and Political by Jonathan Dymond (1845)
"... Their moral requisitions not always coincident—Supremacy of Christian morality—Of
variations in the Moral Law—Mode of a;i ing the precepts of Scripture ..."
5. The Transfer Tax Law of the State of New York: Being Sections 220 to 245 by George Washington McElroy (1909)
"The State's Right to the Tax Is coincident with the Devolution of Title. The right
of the State to the tax is coincident with the devolution of title or ..."