Definitions

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  • adverb In a coeval manner.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • The solution, which as far as I can see is consistent with everything else Collingwood says, is simply to erase the requirement that the listener must undergo anything at the psychical level, the level of sensa, coevally with expression (we leave open the question of whether it must have happened to one in the past).

    Collingwood's Aesthetics Kemp, Gary 2009

  • Ecclesiastical heraldry simply progressed coevally and upon the same lines as heraldry in general.

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability 1840-1916 1913

  • And coevally with these dreamers of grand socialistic improvement, we are met by such evidence as that of Wall

    The Arena Volume 4, No. 24, November, 1891 Various 1888

  • If you don't know it, do know it; it is curious to think of this Diary of his running almost coevally with Walpole's Letter-Diary; the two men born and dying too within a few years of one another, and with such different Lives to record.

    Letters of Edward FitzGerald in Two Volumes Vol. II Edward FitzGerald 1846

  • I have heard that it was rather famous in the hollands and brandy way, and that coevally with that reputation the lamplighter’s was considered a bad life at the

    Reprinted Pieces 2007

  • ‘If you don't know it, do know it; it is curious to think of this Diary of his running almost coevally with Walpole's Letter-Diary, the two men born and dying too within a few years of one another, and with such different lives to record.

    The Hymns of Methodism in their Literary Relations 1913

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