VERB
  1. bring or come into association or action
    The churches consociated to fight their dissolution
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How To Use consociate In A Sentence

  • One of his earliest observations was that white children should know their ages, while the colored children were ignorant of theirs; and the songs of the slaves grated on his inmost soul, because a something told him that harmony in sound, and music of the spirit, could not consociate with miserable degradation. My Bondage and My Freedom
  • It governed the New England churches for sixty years, or until Massachusetts and Connecticut Congregationalism came to the parting of the way, whence one was to develop its associated system of church government, and the other its consociated system as set forth in the Saybrook Platform, formulated at Saybrook, The Development of Religious Liberty in Connecticut
  • One of his earliest observations was that white chlldren should know their ages, while the colored children were ignorant of theirs; and the songs of the slaves grated on his inmost soul, because a something told him that harmony in sound, and music of the spirit, could not consociate with miserable degradation. My Bondage and My Freedom. Part I.--Life as a Slave. Part II.--Life as a Freeman
  • And many are the unsuspected double stars, and frequent are the parasite weeds, which the philosopher detects in the received opinions of men: -- so strong is the tendency of the imagination to identify what it has long consociated. Literary Remains, Volume 1
  • Trumbull says that -- the proposal was universally acceptable, and the churches and the ministers of the several counties met in a consociated council and gave their assent to the Westminster and Savoy Confessions of The Development of Religious Liberty in Connecticut
  • Individuals embarked in various enterprises; now no longer consociated with others in mutual coöperation, but for their individual benefit. Continental Monthly , Vol. 6, No. 1, July, 1864 Devoted to Literature and National Policy.
  • The support of consociates, who share a common work history, has enabled them "to place their lives in perspective.
  • The peculiar advantages of a collegiate course are such as arise from an uninterrupted and systematic course of study, a learned and experienced professor to elucidate and simplify truth, and to guide the mental enquiries of students, -- from the inspiration of consociated effort, and from an opportunity of shutting out all irrelevant subjects, and devoting one's mental energies continuously and exclusively to a definite and specific object. Conscription of Teachers. 12 p.
  • Freedom, as the English now rule the Indies, and in time are destined, consociate with the French, to rule Social relations in our Southern States,
  • The usual feelings of fright are not displayed on these occasions as on the death of one that has died an ordinary death, for the child has not yet been consociated with its two soul companions. The Manóbos of Mindanáo Memoirs of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume XXIII, First Memoir
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