[
US
/koʊˈhɪɹ/
]
[ UK /kəʊhˈiə/ ]
[ UK /kəʊhˈiə/ ]
VERB
-
have internal elements or parts logically connected so that aesthetic consistency results
the principles by which societies cohere -
cause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole
Religion can cohere social groups -
come or be in close contact with; stick or hold together and resist separation
The dress clings to her body
The sushi rice grains cohere
The label stuck to the box
How To Use cohere In A Sentence
- They show the star sometimes rambling and at other times virtually incoherent. The Sun
- She began to mutter incoherently.
- Passengers' eyes divert to Lauren and they begin to mutter incoherently about her.
- This regress is signalled not only by increases in mental confusion but by typography less and less coherent, the type straying over the page, and with some pages simply blank.
- His vision is of a world that coheres through human connection rather than rules.
- The result is a totally incoherent agglomeration of speech-forms -- a baragouin fantastic and unintelligible beyond the power of anyone to imagine who has not heard it .... Two Years in the French West Indies
- We believe he, either, is turning his Nelson's eye to the scientific reports, or, is plain oblivious of Peter Bergen's cogent and coherent articulation of the demerits of EITs as image destroyers for the US. Cheney wrong on interrogation inquiry facts, Obama official says
- It is perfectly coherent from a pure domestic viewpoint. Georges Ugeux: It's the Dollar, Stupid
- The agents transform isolated software applications into modular building blocks for creating a coherent networked system.
- Regardless of whether those pessimistic readings of the debate are correct, and of whether the zombie idea itself is sound or incoherent, it continues to stimulate fruitful work on consciousness, physicalism, phenomenal concepts, and the relations between imaginability, conceivability, and possibility. Zombies