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conjoint

ADJECTIVE
  1. consisting of two or more associated entities
    the interplay of these conjoined yet opposed factors
    social order and prosperity, the conjoint aims of government

How To Use conjoint In A Sentence

  • However, because our task requires observers to identify an object's primary axis, multiple symmetry axes would lead to confusion, and would make the interpretation of conjoint and disjoint results impossible.
  • The quantity of matter is the measure of the same, arising from its density and bulk conjointly .
  • They respond to specific treatments including individual psychotherapy, conjoint family therapy, and even pharmacotherapy.
  • This, dear reader, is my mud-faced conjoint* and that curious behavior of his, in a clamshell, is the difference between him and me; the difference, I now realize, between really living life and poetically lusting after it from the boardwalk above. Jean-Marc
  • Comparably little research has involved couples voluntarily seeking conjoint treatment for intimate violence.
  • Today's students commonly do a conjoint degree - the equivalent of two degrees at once, but with the work crammed into four years instead of six.
  • He found the nutritional consultations most helpful and family meetings least useful, preferring to return to the individual therapist and suggesting that his parents needed conjoint therapy.
  • Although controversy exists about the appropriateness of treating partners conjointly, there are a variety of reasons to recommend conjoint therapy for some couples in violent relationships.
  • As we have already remarked, one hemisphere of the earth (whether we divide the sphere through the equator or through the meridian of Teneriffe) has a much greater expansion of elevated land than the opposite one: these two vast ocean-girt tracts of land, which we term the eastern and western, or the Old and New Continents, present, however, conjointly with the most striking contrasts of configuration and position of their axes, some similarities of form, especially with reference to the mutual relations of their opposite coasts. COSMOS: A Sketch of the Physical Description of the Universe, Vol. 1
  • This process by which utilities are simultaneously assigned within classes and in total so as to satisfy an additivity property has become known as conjoint measurement. Dictionary of the History of Ideas
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