Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

living impaired
living in poverty
living in sin
living language
living languages
living quarters
living rock
living room
living rooms
living space
living standard
living stone
living substance
living thing
living tissue
living together (current term)
living trust
living up
living wage
living will
living wills
livingly
livingness
livingnesses
livingroom
livingroom set
livingroom suite
livingrooms
livings
livingstone daisy

Literary usage of

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The History of Human Marriage by Edward Westermarck (1922)
"... and the same term to an elder sister as to an aunt.2 In an earlier work I have emphasised the immense influence which living together, apart from any ..."

2. Judicial and Statutory Definitions of Words and Phrases by West Publishing Company (1904)
"Cohabitation does not mean merely living together, but is used in the law as relating to the living together of a man and woman as husband and wife. ..."

3. The American and English Encyclopedia of Law by David Shephard Garland, John Houston Merrill, Charles Frederic Williams, Thomas Johnson Michie (1890)
"having life ; being alive,1 in the phrases living together, or to reside in Boston, and filed her libel in the county of Suffolk. The respondent having been ..."

4. The American State Reports: Containing the Cases of General Value and by Abraham Clark Freeman (1890)
"By the parties living together and having carnal intercourse with each other; 2. By the parties having habitual carnal intercourse with each other without ..."

5. The Family: An Ethnographical and Historical Outline with Descriptive Notes by Elsie Worthington Clews Parsons (1908)
"... By marriage we mean the living together of male Definition or and female after the act of propagation until the birth of offspring.1 Before considering ..."

6. A Treatise on Criminal Procedure by Francis Wharton, James Manford Kerr (1918)
"LIVING TOGETHER—COHABITATION. Where, in the statutory definition of fornication, living together and cohabitation is an essential element, it is manifestly ..."

7. The Political Debates Between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas in the by Abraham Lincoln, Stephen Arnold Douglas, George Haven Putnam (1912)
"... the two races living together on terms of social and political equality. And inasmuch as they cannot so live while they do remain together, ..."

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