释义 |
concomitant1 adjectiveconcomitant2 noun concomitantcon‧com‧i‧tant1 /kənˈkɒmɪtənt $ -ˈkɑː-/ adjective formal  concomitant1Origin: 1600-1700 Latin present participle of concomitari ‘to go along with’, from comes ‘companion’ - Soldiers must be aware of the concomitant risks and responsibilities of military service.
- Britain set the pattern with three classes of travel and the concomitant gradation of station facilities.
- Clearly also the rise of urbanism brought a concomitant rise of crime and prostitution.
- No other concomitant infective agents have been implicated in the course of the disease to date.
- No patient had any concomitant disease.
- Spending departments suffered a concomitant set of disadvantages.
- The provision of such packs of information is concomitant with that proposal.
existing or happening together, especially as a result of something SYN attendant: war with all its concomitant sufferings—concomitantly adverb |