Definition of Concomitantly

1. adv. In company with others; unitedly; concurrently.

Definition of Concomitantly

1. Adverb. at the same time as ¹

2. Adverb. incidentally to ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Concomitantly

1. [adv]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Concomitantly

concoctive
concoctor
concoctors
concocts
concolor
concolorate
concolorous
concolourous
concomitance
concomitances
concomitancy
concomitant
concomitant immunity
concomitant strabismus
concomitant symptom
concomitantly (current term)
concomitants
concomitate
concomitated
concomitates
concomitating
concordable
concordal
concordance
concordance rate
concordancer
concordancers
concordances
concordancies
concordancy

Literary usage of Concomitantly

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

1. The British State Telegraphs: A Study of the Problem of a Large Body of by Hugo Richard Meyer (1907)
"The average of expenses on account of wages and salaries rises from 11.54 cents per telegram in 1895-96, to 13.02 cents in 1902-03, concomitantly with an ..."

2. The British State Telegraphs: A Study of the Problem of a Large Body of by Hugo Richard Meyer (1907)
"The average of expenses on account of wages and salaries rises from 11.54 cents per telegram in 1895-96, to 13.02 cents in 1902-03, concomitantly with an ..."

3. The Ductless Glandular Diseases by Wilhelm Falta (1916)
"Neurons of higher orders may, however, be concomitantly involved. This abnormal state expresses itself chiefly in a heightened excitability to mechanical, ..."

4. Psychology by William James (1893)
"Often indeed they vary concomitantly and reach a maximum together. ... Meanwhile the movements concomitantly with which the various fields alternate are ..."

5. The Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research by American Society for Psychical Research (1907)
"concomitantly with them—or immediately subsequent to the first vibrations set up—I experience a feeling of pain. This is a mental fact. ..."

6. The Science of Logic: An Inquiry Into the Principles of Accurate Thought and by Peter Coffey (1912)
"... (3) And C does not vary concomitantly with A, While/does vary concomitantly with A, Therefore/is not C ; and so on, until all the " forms" except one, ..."

7. Eucharistic Presence and Conversion in Late Thirteenth-Century Franciscan by David Burr (1984)
"In the species of wine, only the blood is present ex se, while the body is there concomitantly, since it is naturally united to the blood. ..."

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