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concomitantly
[ kon-kom-i-tuhnt-lee, kuhn- ]
adverb
- along with something else, as a related feature or circumstance:
The high ceilings ensured that all the rooms were comparatively cool in summer but, concomitantly, hard to heat in winter.
- at the same time; concurrently:
She is concomitantly a senior associate with a foreign policy research institute and a consultant for the U.S. government on East Asia.
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Word History and Origins
Origin of concomitantly1
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Example Sentences
As technology’s pace accelerates, the concomitant quickening of life, work, and information has further overloaded our attention.
Prominent personages debated it in public halls, only to be acclaimed and booed concomitantly.
Another group of nurse researchers chose to study the concept of care and caring concomitantly with nursing care practices.
Concomitantly, the profession of nursing attends to the use of that knowledge in response to specific human needs.
Concomitantly with these bodily services and tasks, the mental education of the children goes on till boyhood ceases.
Concomitantly with these changes a different ideal of womanly personality is developing.
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