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词汇 concomitant
释义

Definition of concomitant in English:

concomitant

adjective kənˈkɒmɪt(ə)ntkənˈkɑmədənt
formal
  • Naturally accompanying or associated.

    相伴的,伴随的

    she loved travel, with all its concomitant worries

    她喜爱旅行,包括随之而来的一切烦恼。

    concomitant with his obsession with dirt was a desire for order

    伴随他对肮脏的过分焦虑是对整洁的渴望。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Nor have changes in policy and orientation been accompanied by concomitant changes in legislation.
    • Botulinum toxin, however, appears to be the catalyst and the cornerstone of any combination or concomitant treatments.
    • For example, concomitant complaints of limb weakness suggest the presence of neurologic or connective tissue disease.
    • Romanticism and the political reforms concomitant with liberal thought changed this situation to some extent.
    • It has been argued that sputum eosinophilia is related to concomitant features of asthma.
    • No cases of concomitant AIDS and TB were found in autopsy files before 1985.
    • There is, naturally, some concomitant friction in the house, and distress.
    • Gone is the image of haunted faces, enslaved to drug-addiction and the many vices concomitant with this curse.
    • One concern she has is that the increased stress on the rights of citizens creates a perception that foreign powers have a duty or concomitant right to uphold them.
    • Well, yes, it is, but there is no concomitant responsibility to the audience when something gets popular.
    • The only way intelligent futures are to be realised is by ensuring that influence in one sphere does not mean concomitant influence in other spheres.
    • A presumptive diagnosis can be made quickly based on symptoms and concomitant laboratory results.
    • They are often associated with inhalational injury and other concomitant trauma.
    • Host factors, such as age, disease severity, concomitant drugs, and disease etiology, can affect responses.
    • In common with many other provincial towns in the Republic, there has been a heavy emphasis on housing, with little concomitant amenity provision.
    • Suicidal acts are generally associated with a significant acute crisis in the teenager's life and may also involve concomitant depression.
    • The questions also related to smoking habits, medication, and concomitant disease.
    • Valerian also inhibits the enzyme-induced breakdown of GABA in the brain, with concomitant sedation.
    • One of the central clinical problems in the older alcoholic is the potential for addiction and concomitant withdrawal symptoms.
    • The expression of this gene is associated with concomitant changes in cysteine protease activity of the petals.
    Synonyms
    attendant, accompanying, associated, collateral, related, connected, linked
    accessory, auxiliary
    resultant, resulting, consequent
noun kənˈkɒmɪt(ə)ntkənˈkɑmədənt
formal
  • A phenomenon that naturally accompanies or follows something.

    伴随情况

    he sought promotion without the necessary concomitant of hard work
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Some risks are the inevitable concomitants of the human condition, such as age (youth or old age), illness, and injury.
    • This makes happiness and misery necessary concomitants of consciousness, and thus conscious beings are endowed with a desire for happiness.
    • Wherever people, even powerful rich people, turn tribal and clannish, honor - as well as its concomitants: respect, pride, and dignity - come into serious play in social interactions.
    • Are any of the three common concomitants of conscious experience (thought, feeling, and choice) absent in unconscious perception?
    • Whatever the future brings, disease and death - whatever forms they take - remain inevitable concomitants of life itself.
    • It must be backed by other policy concomitants and broad-based domestic economic reform.
    • Generally, cooptation and commodification have been omnipresent concomitants of efforts to reach wider audiences through major labels.
    • Evidence for the centrality of food ‘includes the facial expression, which focuses on oral expulsion and closing of the nares, and the physiological concomitants of nausea and gagging.’
    • Food rationing, shortages, bombed cities, damaged railways, such things were accepted as the inevitable concomitants of war.
    • For women old age was often thought to start earlier, in the late forties or around fifty, when the physical concomitants of menopause became visible; for men the defining characteristic was capacity for full-time work.
    • Not all variables that have been associated with psychopathology are risks; some of them may be concomitants or even consequences of psychopathology.
    • Mr. Davies has also suffered from marked alcohol dependency and a major depressive disorder which are common concomitants of PTSD.
    • Discussing the concomitants of ‘community,’ Schuster quotes P.M. Jones' study of neighborhoods in seventeenth-century Paris.
    • If ratified, the constitution would open the gates, not to ‘savage liberalism’, but politically correct social ‘rightsism’ with the economic stagnation and unemployment that are its concomitants.
    • Proposed causes included genetics, increasing alcohol use, urbanization, industrialization, increased immigration and various concomitants of civilization that might have caused an overload on the brain.
    • Sometimes, however, it is more appropriate to think of accidents as concomitants, the result of different demonstrative chains.
    • ‘Gerry's condition is really a complex and severe post-traumatic stress disorder, with all the usual concomitants: sleep disturbance, nightmares, flashbacks, depression, switches in mood,’ he remarks.
    • All this suggests that abetting globalization, and its natural concomitants of economic and political liberty, is a big part of any successful war on terrorism.
    • Although there are distinct benefits to those graduating from our public school system, the psychological costs and their physical, relational, and social concomitants are rarely acknowledged.
    • In this model, drug court treatment outcomes do not themselves ‘cause’ reoffending or its absence, they are concomitants.
    Synonyms
    result, consequence, outcome, out-turn, sequel, effect, reaction, repercussion, reverberations, ramification, end, end result, conclusion, termination, culmination, denouement, corollary, concomitant, aftermath, fruit, fruits, product, produce, by-product

Derivatives

  • concomitantly

  • adverbkənˈkɒmɪt(ə)ntliˌkənˈkɑmədəntli
    formal
    • At the same time; simultaneously.

      this may impact absorption of concomitantly administered oral medications
      Example sentencesExamples
      • This consciousness developed concomitantly with the social, economic, and political transformations taking place in the Arab world in the first half of the twentieth century.
      • Parents noted that their children had become more independent and, concomitantly, more mature and responsible.
      • Although we live in an age marked by relativism, ever-increasing secular concerns, and concomitantly weakening religious influence, the term is far from anachronistic.

Origin

Early 17th century: from late Latin concomitant- 'accompanying', from concomitari, from con- 'together with' + comitari, from Latin comes 'companion'.

Definition of concomitant in US English:

concomitant

adjectivekənˈkɑmədəntkənˈkämədənt
formal
  • Naturally accompanying or associated.

    相伴的,伴随的

    she loved travel, with all its concomitant worries

    她喜爱旅行,包括随之而来的一切烦恼。

    concomitant with his obsession with dirt was a desire for order

    伴随他对肮脏的过分焦虑是对整洁的渴望。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The expression of this gene is associated with concomitant changes in cysteine protease activity of the petals.
    • Gone is the image of haunted faces, enslaved to drug-addiction and the many vices concomitant with this curse.
    • Valerian also inhibits the enzyme-induced breakdown of GABA in the brain, with concomitant sedation.
    • The questions also related to smoking habits, medication, and concomitant disease.
    • There is, naturally, some concomitant friction in the house, and distress.
    • Nor have changes in policy and orientation been accompanied by concomitant changes in legislation.
    • One of the central clinical problems in the older alcoholic is the potential for addiction and concomitant withdrawal symptoms.
    • Botulinum toxin, however, appears to be the catalyst and the cornerstone of any combination or concomitant treatments.
    • The only way intelligent futures are to be realised is by ensuring that influence in one sphere does not mean concomitant influence in other spheres.
    • Host factors, such as age, disease severity, concomitant drugs, and disease etiology, can affect responses.
    • A presumptive diagnosis can be made quickly based on symptoms and concomitant laboratory results.
    • It has been argued that sputum eosinophilia is related to concomitant features of asthma.
    • Romanticism and the political reforms concomitant with liberal thought changed this situation to some extent.
    • Well, yes, it is, but there is no concomitant responsibility to the audience when something gets popular.
    • For example, concomitant complaints of limb weakness suggest the presence of neurologic or connective tissue disease.
    • No cases of concomitant AIDS and TB were found in autopsy files before 1985.
    • One concern she has is that the increased stress on the rights of citizens creates a perception that foreign powers have a duty or concomitant right to uphold them.
    • In common with many other provincial towns in the Republic, there has been a heavy emphasis on housing, with little concomitant amenity provision.
    • Suicidal acts are generally associated with a significant acute crisis in the teenager's life and may also involve concomitant depression.
    • They are often associated with inhalational injury and other concomitant trauma.
    Synonyms
    attendant, accompanying, associated, collateral, related, connected, linked
nounkənˈkɑmədəntkənˈkämədənt
formal
  • A phenomenon that naturally accompanies or follows something.

    伴随情况

    some of us look on pain and illness as concomitants of the stresses of living

    我们有些人认为,痛苦和疾病是生活压力造成的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Whatever the future brings, disease and death - whatever forms they take - remain inevitable concomitants of life itself.
    • For women old age was often thought to start earlier, in the late forties or around fifty, when the physical concomitants of menopause became visible; for men the defining characteristic was capacity for full-time work.
    • Proposed causes included genetics, increasing alcohol use, urbanization, industrialization, increased immigration and various concomitants of civilization that might have caused an overload on the brain.
    • Generally, cooptation and commodification have been omnipresent concomitants of efforts to reach wider audiences through major labels.
    • Evidence for the centrality of food ‘includes the facial expression, which focuses on oral expulsion and closing of the nares, and the physiological concomitants of nausea and gagging.’
    • Sometimes, however, it is more appropriate to think of accidents as concomitants, the result of different demonstrative chains.
    • It must be backed by other policy concomitants and broad-based domestic economic reform.
    • All this suggests that abetting globalization, and its natural concomitants of economic and political liberty, is a big part of any successful war on terrorism.
    • Discussing the concomitants of ‘community,’ Schuster quotes P.M. Jones' study of neighborhoods in seventeenth-century Paris.
    • Are any of the three common concomitants of conscious experience (thought, feeling, and choice) absent in unconscious perception?
    • In this model, drug court treatment outcomes do not themselves ‘cause’ reoffending or its absence, they are concomitants.
    • Not all variables that have been associated with psychopathology are risks; some of them may be concomitants or even consequences of psychopathology.
    • Wherever people, even powerful rich people, turn tribal and clannish, honor - as well as its concomitants: respect, pride, and dignity - come into serious play in social interactions.
    • If ratified, the constitution would open the gates, not to ‘savage liberalism’, but politically correct social ‘rightsism’ with the economic stagnation and unemployment that are its concomitants.
    • Food rationing, shortages, bombed cities, damaged railways, such things were accepted as the inevitable concomitants of war.
    • Some risks are the inevitable concomitants of the human condition, such as age (youth or old age), illness, and injury.
    • Although there are distinct benefits to those graduating from our public school system, the psychological costs and their physical, relational, and social concomitants are rarely acknowledged.
    • Mr. Davies has also suffered from marked alcohol dependency and a major depressive disorder which are common concomitants of PTSD.
    • ‘Gerry's condition is really a complex and severe post-traumatic stress disorder, with all the usual concomitants: sleep disturbance, nightmares, flashbacks, depression, switches in mood,’ he remarks.
    • This makes happiness and misery necessary concomitants of consciousness, and thus conscious beings are endowed with a desire for happiness.
    Synonyms
    result, consequence, outcome, out-turn, sequel, effect, reaction, repercussion, reverberations, ramification, end, end result, conclusion, termination, culmination, denouement, corollary, concomitant, aftermath, fruit, fruits, product, produce, by-product

Origin

Early 17th century: from late Latin concomitant- ‘accompanying’, from concomitari, from con- ‘together with’ + comitari, from Latin comes ‘companion’.

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