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concomitance
[kon-kom-i-tuhns, kuhn-]
noun
the quality or relation of being concomitant.
Roman Catholic Church.the coexistence of the body and blood of Christ in the Eucharistic bread.
concomitance
/ əˈɒɪəԲ /
noun
existence or occurrence together or in connection with another
a thing that exists in connection with another
Christian theol the doctrine that the body and blood of Christ are present in the Eucharist
Word History and Origins
Origin of concomitance1
Example Sentences
“But the victory in this battle required the concomitance.”
Thus, in hunting for some cause and effect in the activity of the will, we bring to light, in the end, only a certain concomitance and sequence.
As respects complexity, intensity, and time-order, the concomitance is apparently complete.
It is to place it in a necessary link of succession, concomitance, and causality with other phenomena which explain it by analogy.
The locative primarily denotes rest in a place, the ablative motion from a place, and the instrumental the means or concomitance of an action.
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