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
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  • 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!
  • As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval with suburbia.
  • War is coeval with human civilization and pervasive in human history. Our Elite Schools Have Abandoned Military History
  • We need to thank our stars that we are coevals of such starry-eyed idealists who are prepared to stake their lives on something that is not their immediate concern.
  • Nevertheless these pages give a sense of the sheer intellectual freedom that Macdonald and his coevals enjoyed.
  • (p. 75); the chaos from which its world is created is powerful and essential to the creative process: “infinite darkness ... abyss ... bottomless depth” (p. 24) recall the coeval chaos of pagan mythology as well as the materia prima of alchemy (Jung, 1953, 1963). HERMETICISM
  • All of these faunas are probably roughly coeval.
  • The collection itself was patchy, weakened by the kind of fabulism and look-at-me rhetorical gimmicks found in books by his coevals Jonathan Lethem and Jonathan Safran Foer. Life With and Without Tradition
  • I can't tell you more about this fragile play, except that Vada and her coevals Enid and Marybell like to play canasta and gossip in a tree house.
  • My thoughts are often pensively turning on the enumeration of those I may call my coevals; and many of them of long acquaintance who have been called away within these few years. Reminiscences of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Robert Southey
  • But nearly all its public buildings seem to be known; the graves on the east side, if correctly mapped by their discoverers and if coeval with the streets and houses, leave no room for further 'insulae' in that direction, while the great country-house called the 'Casa dei Papiri' plainly stood outside the town on the north-west. Ancient Town-Planning
  • 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.
  • Some kind of chieftainship seems coeval with the first advance from the state of separate wandering families to that of a nomadic tribe. Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects Everyman's Library
  • It is generally accepted that modern English literature was born in the second half of the 16th Century which was coeval with the Age of Elizabeth and the Renaissance.
  • That voice beckons you in with glimpses of a world where pleasure and pain are coeval and complementary, where love and loss walk hand in hand.
  • You could say that Muti is, at the moment, a bigger star than Eschenbach, but the two approximately coeval conductors (Muti turns 70 next summer) have a lot in common. Where's the buzz?
  • Of critical importance to our argument is that the assemblages from the Chinese and Russian localities are coeval.
  • Coming from the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas, this retrospective of Neel's portraits is an exhaustive gathering of her loosely painted but psychologically acute portraits of her friends, loved ones, and coevals in the mid-century New York City art scene. ARTINFO: Top 10 Shows to See in London
  • Between two million and one million years ago there were four known coeval "apemen," including three that probably used tools. Darwin's Revolution
  • Dickens and his coevals shared an uncompromising belief in the reclamation of a golden age and the amelioration of society and the individual.
  • Armour for the lower legs was roughly coeval with that for the torso.
  • There, Early to Middle Jurassic marine black shales and carbonate rocks of Pampa de Agnia and Tepuel are interbedded with andesite lava flows and pyroclastic rocks, and silicic volcanic rocks coeval with Gondwana breakup.
  • Upper Jurassic Fossil Bluff Group rocks are intruded by coeval, minor alkaline basaltic rocks.
  • Snooki" is the stage name of 23-year-old Miss Nicole Polizzi, who shares a beach house with seven coevals in the reality-TV show Jersey Shore. Other Comments
  • This scene is more delightful for the male tree than arein the poem's very last linestheir own reflections for the "coeval" trees in the sheltered vale. Wordsworth's 'The Haunted Tree' and the Sexual Politics of Landscape
  • The rocks are asymmetrically folded and overthrust to the west, with chaotic units and abundant evidence for coeval soft-sediment deformation.
  • The orchestra, founded in 1912, and Symphony 3 (1913-15, premiered 1917) are roughly coevals.
  • The footnote as we know it is coeval with the modern principles of book design that emerged with the Enlightenment.
  • And this proficience in navigation and discoveries may plant also an expectation of the further proficience and augmentation of all sciences, because it may seem that they are ordained by God to be coevals, that is, to meet in one age. The Idea of Progress An inguiry into its origin and growth
  • A similar, coeval flux of Pelagonian material has been recognized in the Mesohellenic molasse basin of northern Greece.
  • He highlights recent compositions more than most of his 60's coevals, but these, too, are delivered as highly stylized, singsongy chants.
  • But the gauzy Norman Rockwell normality he invoked won't persuade the electorate at a time of 10 percent unemployment, the Damocles sword that hangs over his head for 2012, when voters will get a chance to weigh in directly on his presidency, which he has largely placed in the hands of Ivy League meritocrats more concerned with protecting their wealthy coevals than the general public. Jacob Heilbrunn: Obama's Tactical Press Conference
  • The described fauna is most similar in composition to that recorded from coeval beds at Malyi Karatau, Kazakhstan.
  • Ever since his coeval Jeff Goldberg moved a bit away from the ZOA-Peretz line on Israel\Palestine. Matthew Yglesias » Wieseltier vs Sullivan
  • We are drawn to our robotic coevals by the ‘similarity-attraction principle,’ a consistent pattern in social psychology.
  • Organs, fluids, eggs, scrotal sacs all might come to mind; the secret life of the body and our most primitive biological heritage swarm this nest of coeval somethings. Louise Bourgeois: 10 essential artworks
  • Therefore, the ferruginization of the basal channel conglomerates is seen as coeval with ground-water ferricrete formation in the interfluves.
  • As far as I can tell, the concept of the hormone-crazed teenager is coeval with suburbia.
  • The authentic portrait of the "Lost Generation" Gertrude Stein's phrase for Hemingway and his coevals. The Slow Crack-Up
  • The age of incision of the Wonoka canyons and coeval canyons in the Officer Basin is known only within broad limits.
  • The wall paper and carpets are mostly green, coeval with the gasalier and the Venetian blinds. The Doctor's Dilemma
  • For the great Scottish skeptic, the oscillation between civilization and barbarism was coeval with human history; in ethical and political terms the future was bound to be much like the past.
  • The overall fauna is not very diverse compared with coeval faunas from central Asia documented by Holmer et al.
  • Coeval gabbro intrusions are composed of unlayered, fine- to medium-grained, biotite-bearing norite, gabbronorite, gabbro and diorite.
  • In a plate-tectonic scenario, aulagogenic basins are those located at re-entrants on continental plate margins, and their initial formation is coeval with continental break-up.
  • The urge to invent oneself begins early and is perhaps coeval with the advent of any sort of self-consciousness.
  • The records from coeval localities in Russia and NW China provide independent and unique evidence of deteriorating atmospheric conditions at the close of the Permian.
  • The urge to invent oneself begins early and is perhaps coeval with the advent of any sort of self-consciousness.
  • The terrestrial ecology of Pennsylvanian tropical wetlands is understood in detail, but coeval dryland ecosystems remain highly enigmatic.
  • The scattered nature of the outcrop and the possibility of diachronous volcanism mean that all rocks grouped as Dokhan Volcanic Series may not be coeval.
  • The paradox of the season is also embodied in tragic romances like the one based on a play written by Tan Xianzu, a coeval of Shakespeare.
  • Her fictional worlds, like those of her best-selling coevals Wally Lamb and Khaled Hosseini, are marked by trauma, persecution and suffering, relieved only intermittently by freakish moments of well-being. The Reigning Queen of Victim Lit
  • I wondered if she included her coevals' favorite in her list of safe locales, despite its history.
  • Such an object would be eternal (or, at least, coeval with time itself) and immutable.
  • Their lineations, which are not influenced by the intrusion boundaries, faithfully reflect the stretching direction of the tectonic regime coeval with magma emplacement and cooling.
  • Charles Hudson of Massachusetts observed that Adams' public service was coeval with the establishment of the government.

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