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Definition of Concomitance
1. Noun. Occurrence or existence together or in connection with one another.
Definition of Concomitance
1. n. The state of accompanying; accompaniment.
Definition of Concomitance
1. Noun. occurrence or existence together or in connection with one another ¹
2. Noun. a concomitant ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Concomitance
1. [n -S]
Medical Definition of Concomitance
1. In esotropia, one eye accompanying the other in all excursions, as in concomitant strabismus. Origin: con-+ L. Comito-, pp. -atus, to accompany (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concomitance
Literary usage of Concomitance
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mental Science: A Compendium of Psychology, and the History of Philosophy by Alexander Bain (1870)
"Although Subject and Object (Mind and Matter) are the most widely opposed facts
of our experience, yet there is, in nature, a concomitance or connexion ..."
2. A Text Book of the History of Doctrines by Karl Rudolf Hagenbach (1867)
"§195. THE "WITHHOLDING OF THE CUP FROM THE LAITY. concomitance. ... theologians
advanced the doctrine of concomitance, developed about the same time, ..."
3. Bodily Changes in Pain, Hunger, Fear and Rage: An Account of Recent by Walter Bradford Cannon (1920)
"THE concomitance OF CONTRACTIONS AND HUNGER IN MAN Although the evidence above
outlined had led me to the conviction that hunger results from contractions ..."
4. A System of Metaphysics by George Stuart Fullerton (1904)
"But what if the concomitance of mind and brain be of a startlingly different sort
from ... When we do this, we are explaining concomitance of one sort here, ..."
5. Compendium of the History of Doctrines by Karl Rudolf Hagenbach (1852)
"195. THE WITHHOLDING OF THE CUP FROM THE LAITY. concomitance. ... theologians
advanced the doctrine of concomitance, which was developed about the same time ..."
6. Elements of Inductive Logic by Noah Knowles Davis (1895)
"We cite some examples of direct concomitance : On the earth there is no instance
of motion persisting indefinitely, and hence the ancients held, ..."