¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Concomitances
1. concomitance [n] - See also: concomitance
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concomitances
Literary usage of Concomitances
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Southern Review (1828)
"Where the concomitances have been repeatedly observed, by several careful ...
For the more numerous these concomitances and associations are found to be, ..."
2. The British Controversialist and Literary Magazine (1867)
"... or non-concomitances ¡ as in 'every man is an animal,' or as in ' no man is
a vegetable.' " " I take a falsehood for once to remind the reader that with ..."
3. Nature by Norman Lockyer (1878)
"These temporary concomitances are not absolutely rare in the history of sciences.—On
a new compound of palladium, by MM. Sainte-Claire Deville and Debray. ..."
4. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1911)
"These phenomena of the concomitances of the subjective and objective changes will
be difficult to account for adequately in any other way than to assume a ..."
5. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) (1901)
"If, he said, we were to take positions homologous with respect to the northern
and southern magnetic poles respectively, would there not be concomitances in ..."
6. Religio Medici: A Letter to a Friend, Christian Morals, Urn-burial, and by Sir Thomas Browne, James Thomas Fields (1862)
"Stain not fair acts with foul intentions : maun not uprightness by halting
concomitances, nor circumstantially deprave substantial goodness. ..."
7. The Living Age by Making of America Project, Eliakim Littell, Robert S. Littell (1861)
"These sequences and conjunctions and concomitances are effected by the will of
the Creator. In the words of Augustine, " Dei Voluntas rerum natura est. ..."
8. Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology: Including Many of the Principal by James Mark Baldwin (1901)
"... as an objective world in which it traces causal connections, concomitances,
or séquences, and the evolution of the more complex from simpler formations. ..."