NOUN
  1. a person of nearly the same age as another
ADJECTIVE
  1. of the same period
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How To Use coeval In A Sentence

  • At the City of Manchester Stadium, Neville's coeval Patrick Vieira ran amok, scoring twice. Forget the obsession with youth, football's future is grey and balding | Harry Pearson
  • Their biostratigraphic relationships with coeval assemblages from Patagonia deserve more detailed analysis in the future.
  • This is why I say that the moral achievement of extending concern to others needn't antedate compassion, but can be coeval with it.
  • Sam Houston, pragmatist, had ordered the Alamo and the coeval dust wallow, San Antonio Breixas, abandoned to Santa Ana's army, which Houston correctly foresaw would overrun the small band of defenders. Alamo Rag
  • American horror writer H.P. Lovecraft asserted that weird supernatural horror fiction arose from a fundamental human psychological pattern that is "coeval with the religious feeling and closely related to many aspects of it. Dark Awakenings and Cosmic Horror : The Lovecraft News Network
  • The parallels between the two unconnected, coeval sites would have fascinated her.
  • The apparent absence of significant erosion between eruptions suggests little or no coeval deformation.
  • Contributions from fields as diverse as etymology and etymology and as coeval as cosmology and cosmetology will receive big wet kisses. Materials sought for Biography of Irish Rockers, "The Naked Rowdies"
  • In addition, we also carry out a preliminary survey of coeval fossil plants from the same locations and present potential plant candidates which might have been involved in insect interactions.
  • Stratigraphically, the former precedes the latter, but chronologically they are supposed to be partly coeval!
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