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[ UK /kˌə‍ʊɛɡzˈɪst/ ]
[ US /ˌkoʊəɡˈzɪst/ ]
VERB
  1. coexist peacefully, as of nations
  2. exist together

How To Use coexist In A Sentence

  • Adams is deeply interested in the broader musical dimensions of culture, how pop music and classical music coexist and sometimes cross-fertilize, how composers need audience feedback, how musical generations succeed one another and how some artists will fight quixotic battles to their dying day, holding true to avant-garde orthodoxy no matter how isolating it is. A conversation with John Adams, composer and so much else
  • Interestingly, several isotropic fluorescence times were found to coexist, indicating structural heterogeneity of the DNA.
  • This ancient placental family coexisted with the marsupials from the early days of the continent's isolation.
  • An album that finally demonstrates that ferocity and intelligence coexist beautifully.
  • For example, plant monomeric forms, composed only of catalytic subunits, are relatively common in plant species and coexist with higher molecular weight forms (presumably tetrameric, according to its molecular size).
  • The two could no longer coexist and it was therefore a class struggle between the Southern slaveholding aristocracy and the Northern capitalist democracy.
  • I like movies that deal with people, especially people from different cultures coexisting and trying to get along.
  • And her moral ideals must coexist with knowledge of the capacity for evil, both within others and within herself. Trauma and Recovery
  • We should not assume that peaceful coexistence is possible only if all, or nearly all major nations adopt the same social behaviour. A High Standard
  • Aneurysms of the infrarenal abdominal aorta and iliac arteries coexist to such a degree that they may be considered a single clinical entity.
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