Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
cohort .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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It's good to see that some journalists actually have ethics after all and realize how dangerous it is when the media and the administration are working in cohorts with eachother.
Reliable Sources: Journos spar over Obama presser question 2009
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"Firing at your cohorts is tricky business and difficult to explain if there were to be an inquiry."
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Not that I like Romney any better but he least he isn't in cohorts with
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Of course we can rationalize any single inconvenient story or piece of data away -- it's just when they come in cohorts that we have trouble.
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They bond together by enrolling in cohorts of 15 or 20 students who share an academic major, such as business administration or child development.
Schools must make extra effort to help transfer students adjust 2008
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My mom, like many of her cohorts, is retiring this Spring.
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My mom, like many of her cohorts, is retiring this Spring.
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To have such a rot of humanity on this planet like him and his extreme Rightists cohorts is like allowing Rats to invade your bed at night.
Think Progress » Cheney Promotes Individuals Named In Indictment 2005
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Then today, in an effort to get more dem support, he calls his cohorts cowards. niiice.
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In a study published in June, Dan Muldoon and Richard Kopcke, a research associate and research economist, respectively, at the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, found that by isolating "cohorts" -- groups of people born in specific years -- they could get a clearer picture of when workers first claim Social Security.
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