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词汇 coeval
释义

Definition of coeval in English:

coeval

adjective kəʊˈiːv(ə)lˌkoʊˈiv(ə)l
  • Having the same age or date of origin; contemporary.

    同年龄的;同时期的;同时代的

    these lavas were coeval with the volcanic activity

    这些火山岩和那次火山活动是同时期的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Charles Hudson of Massachusetts observed that Adams' public service was coeval with the establishment of the government.
    • A similar, coeval flux of Pelagonian material has been recognized in the Mesohellenic molasse basin of northern Greece.
    • Their biostratigraphic relationships with coeval assemblages from Patagonia deserve more detailed analysis in the future.
    • The terrestrial ecology of Pennsylvanian tropical wetlands is understood in detail, but coeval dryland ecosystems remain highly enigmatic.
    • The described fauna is most similar in composition to that recorded from coeval beds at Malyi Karatau, Kazakhstan.
    • All of these faunas are probably roughly coeval.
    • The parallels between the two unconnected, coeval sites would have fascinated her.
    • The age of incision of the Wonoka canyons and coeval canyons in the Officer Basin is known only within broad limits.
    • That voice beckons you in with glimpses of a world where pleasure and pain are coeval and complementary, where love and loss walk hand in hand.
    • The records from coeval localities in Russia and NW China provide independent and unique evidence of deteriorating atmospheric conditions at the close of the Permian.
    • Such an object would be eternal (or, at least, coeval with time itself) and immutable.
    • It is generally accepted that modern English literature was born in the second half of the 16th Century which was coeval with the Age of Elizabeth and the Renaissance.
    • As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval with suburbia.
    • Stratigraphically, the former precedes the latter, but chronologically they are supposed to be partly coeval!
    • The overall fauna is not very diverse compared with coeval faunas from central Asia documented by Holmer et al.
    • Of critical importance to our argument is that the assemblages from the Chinese and Russian localities are coeval.
    • Armour for the lower legs was roughly coeval with that for the torso.
    • This is why I say that the moral achievement of extending concern to others needn't antedate compassion, but can be coeval with it.
    • The apparent absence of significant erosion between eruptions suggests little or no coeval deformation.
    • The footnote as we know it is coeval with the modern principles of book design that emerged with the Enlightenment.
    Synonyms
    contemporaneous, concurrent, coeval, synchronous, synchronic, of the time, of the day, simultaneous
noun kəʊˈiːv(ə)lˌkoʊˈiv(ə)l
  • A person of roughly the same age as oneself; a contemporary.

    年龄相近的人;同时代的人

    like so many of his coevals, he yearned for stability
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I can't tell you more about this fragile play, except that Vada and her coevals Enid and Marybell like to play canasta and gossip in a tree house.
    • I wondered if she included her coevals' favorite in her list of safe locales, despite its history.
    • Dickens and his coevals shared an uncompromising belief in the reclamation of a golden age and the amelioration of society and the individual.
    • We need to thank our stars that we are coevals of such starry-eyed idealists who are prepared to stake their lives on something that is not their immediate concern.
    • Nevertheless these pages give a sense of the sheer intellectual freedom that Macdonald and his coevals enjoyed.
    • The paradox of the season is also embodied in tragic romances like the one based on a play written by Tan Xianzu, a coeval of Shakespeare.
    • The orchestra, founded in 1912, and Symphony 3 (1913-15, premiered 1917) are roughly coevals.
    • We are drawn to our robotic coevals by the ‘similarity-attraction principle,’ a consistent pattern in social psychology.
    • He highlights recent compositions more than most of his 60's coevals, but these, too, are delivered as highly stylized, singsongy chants.
    Synonyms
    peer, equal, contemporary, brother

Derivatives

  • coevality

  • noun kəʊiːˈvalɪti
    • What is missing from his notion of coevality is a hypothetical scene of common origin.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Using the coevality constraint for the formation of such close binaries, the derived source properties are used to constrain available pre-main-sequence tracks.
      • It is the proximal status of the ‘other’ within contemporary societies - the coevality of otherwise distant social, cultural and symbolic spaces - that underpins much that is at the heart of his concerns.
      • Although these jumps may indicate hiatuses in sedimentation, their coevality with the Laschamp and Mono Lake geomagnetic excursions suggests that they were owing to major variations in atmospheric C concentration.
      • We show that the characteristic function condition is equivalent to a simpler condition on the score spaces themselves, and introduce coevality to obtain weaker sufficient conditions.
  • coevally

  • adverb
    • Having formed coevally, studying the inhabiting stars in these clusters can yield a great deal of information.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Due to the coevally collected comprehensive socio-economic list of questions, the microcensus offers analysis options on various questions.
      • We also find that the age and metallicities of the globular clusters are consistent with the red giant stars in the field, suggesting that the two systems formed coevally.
      • Cells influence and communicate with each other coevally.
      • An exhumation event, defined as the vertical displacement of rocks with respect to the surface, may have started coevally with the emplacement of the pluton.

Origin

Early 17th century (as a noun): from late Latin coaevus, from co- 'jointly' + Latin aevum 'age'.

Rhymes

evil, Khedival, medieval, primeval, retrieval, shrieval, upheaval

Definition of coeval in US English:

coeval

adjectiveˌkōˈēv(ə)lˌkoʊˈiv(ə)l
  • Having the same age or date of origin; contemporary.

    同年龄的;同时期的;同时代的

    these lavas were coeval with the volcanic activity

    这些火山岩和那次火山活动是同时期的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The described fauna is most similar in composition to that recorded from coeval beds at Malyi Karatau, Kazakhstan.
    • The age of incision of the Wonoka canyons and coeval canyons in the Officer Basin is known only within broad limits.
    • As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval with suburbia.
    • This is why I say that the moral achievement of extending concern to others needn't antedate compassion, but can be coeval with it.
    • The apparent absence of significant erosion between eruptions suggests little or no coeval deformation.
    • A similar, coeval flux of Pelagonian material has been recognized in the Mesohellenic molasse basin of northern Greece.
    • Of critical importance to our argument is that the assemblages from the Chinese and Russian localities are coeval.
    • That voice beckons you in with glimpses of a world where pleasure and pain are coeval and complementary, where love and loss walk hand in hand.
    • It is generally accepted that modern English literature was born in the second half of the 16th Century which was coeval with the Age of Elizabeth and the Renaissance.
    • Such an object would be eternal (or, at least, coeval with time itself) and immutable.
    • The records from coeval localities in Russia and NW China provide independent and unique evidence of deteriorating atmospheric conditions at the close of the Permian.
    • The terrestrial ecology of Pennsylvanian tropical wetlands is understood in detail, but coeval dryland ecosystems remain highly enigmatic.
    • Armour for the lower legs was roughly coeval with that for the torso.
    • All of these faunas are probably roughly coeval.
    • Their biostratigraphic relationships with coeval assemblages from Patagonia deserve more detailed analysis in the future.
    • Charles Hudson of Massachusetts observed that Adams' public service was coeval with the establishment of the government.
    • The parallels between the two unconnected, coeval sites would have fascinated her.
    • The footnote as we know it is coeval with the modern principles of book design that emerged with the Enlightenment.
    • Stratigraphically, the former precedes the latter, but chronologically they are supposed to be partly coeval!
    • The overall fauna is not very diverse compared with coeval faunas from central Asia documented by Holmer et al.
    Synonyms
    contemporaneous, concurrent, coeval, synchronous, synchronic, of the time, of the day, simultaneous
nounˌkōˈēv(ə)lˌkoʊˈiv(ə)l
  • A person of roughly the same age as oneself; a contemporary.

    年龄相近的人;同时代的人

    like so many of his coevals, he yearned for stability
    Example sentencesExamples
    • He highlights recent compositions more than most of his 60's coevals, but these, too, are delivered as highly stylized, singsongy chants.
    • Dickens and his coevals shared an uncompromising belief in the reclamation of a golden age and the amelioration of society and the individual.
    • The orchestra, founded in 1912, and Symphony 3 (1913-15, premiered 1917) are roughly coevals.
    • I can't tell you more about this fragile play, except that Vada and her coevals Enid and Marybell like to play canasta and gossip in a tree house.
    • We are drawn to our robotic coevals by the ‘similarity-attraction principle,’ a consistent pattern in social psychology.
    • We need to thank our stars that we are coevals of such starry-eyed idealists who are prepared to stake their lives on something that is not their immediate concern.
    • I wondered if she included her coevals' favorite in her list of safe locales, despite its history.
    • Nevertheless these pages give a sense of the sheer intellectual freedom that Macdonald and his coevals enjoyed.
    • The paradox of the season is also embodied in tragic romances like the one based on a play written by Tan Xianzu, a coeval of Shakespeare.
    Synonyms
    peer, equal, contemporary, brother

Origin

Early 17th century (as a noun): from late Latin coaevus, from co- ‘jointly’ + Latin aevum ‘age’.

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