| 释义 | 
		Definition of coexist in English: coexistverb ˌkəʊɪɡˈzɪstˌkoʊəɡˈzɪst [no object]1Exist at the same time or in the same place.  dwarf mammoths may have survived in north-east Siberia to coexist with the Egyptian pharaohs  Example sentencesExamples -  The company says the wind farm would coexist with existing agricultural practices supporting farm diversification.
 -  This is likely to be a logistical problem in areas where diarrhoea is common and coexists with cholera.
 -  These trees evolved to coexist with regular fires, but today's larger fires pose a mortal threat to them.
 -  Governments cannot coexist with forces that are hell bent on their destruction.
 -  At first trams and trolley buses coexisted in a certain harmony, because each of the lines used one system exclusively.
 -  Amazon plants, evergreen pines, basil and other strange flora coexisted in perfect harmony.
 -  By adopting a muted form of cultural relativism, the scientific establishment seeks to coexist with other points of view.
 -  Seeds at different developmental stages coexist at the same time on the plant, and even in a single inflorescence.
 -  Modern Western medical practices coexist with traditional healing methods and the use of medicinal plants.
 -  This applies to all of us who try to coexist with animals.
 -  Cancer can coexist with benign lesions, so complete assessment is necessary.
 -  She figured out a way that pillbugs could harmlessly coexist with a garden's plants.
 -  And the new economy is here to stay and will coexist with the old one.
 -  Canal operators are finding new ways to do their maintenance work that could coexist with canal redevelopment.
 -  Traditional musical genres coexist with music performed by modern village orchestras.
 -  The low nutrient availability may allow stress-tolerant species to coexist with more ruderal species.
 -  Some employees and students reported that feelings of sadness and hurt coexist with anger.
 -  Here the rural and the urban seem to coexist in a certain harmony.
 -  Nobody has convincingly explained how the birds, bees, flowers and hares of the uplands can coexist with a new influx of humans.
 -  I still cling to the idea that people are part of nature, and there must be some way we can coexist with the rest of it.
 
  Synonyms occur with, co-occur with, coincide with, coexist with, go with, go along with, go together with, go hand in hand with, appear with - 1.1 (of nations or peoples) exist in harmony despite different ideologies or interests.
 the task of diplomacy was to help different states to coexist  Example sentencesExamples -  It's not just the history of the Christian population in Angamaly but also that of an area where people of different faiths coexist.
 -  Initially, the Jewish settlers coexisted peacefully and harmoniously with the indigenous, partly nomadic Arab population.
 -  Defeating the terrorists also means defeating their poisonous belief that peoples of different faiths and ethnic origins cannot coexist.
 -  The two women had managed to coexist for a month now, and despite their differences, were inseparable friends.
 -  The Nomads were the only other large group of people around, but they were so different from us that we could never hope to coexist.
 -  It does not follow that because southerners of different backgrounds exchanged traditions they always coexisted peacefully.
 -  The environment needs to be unquestionably safe for Mum and myself to coexist in harmony, and tensions were beginning to fray.
 -  It also created a climate of tolerance in which different ethnic and religious groups have been able to coexist.
 -  I like movies that deal with people, especially people from different cultures coexisting and trying to get along.
 -  I propose we consider the civilized Gandhian option of learning to respect each other and coexist in peace and harmony.
 -  It sounds like it's a very international student body that has coexisted quite harmoniously.
 -  The religious believer can coexist harmoniously with the non-religious.
 -  The piece reflected the identity of the contemporary Indian who coexists with persons of different faiths.
 -  The different groups coexisted because Paul knew how to do it.
 -  Different religions coexisting in Kerala has been an inspiring experience to him.
 -  It uses the mutual trust and mutual recognition of civil society as a way of helping identities and interests to coexist.
 -  In some areas of human activity it is often very important that two mutually exclusive views be allowed to coexist in the interests of stability.
 -  He understands it to be a redundant, intolerant, expansionist ideology incapable of peacefully coexisting with other faiths.
 -  We've got to work out how you exist in a multicultural world, where diversity is respected, but where people are able to live in harmony and coexist.
 -  Before anything else, the country must establish a system that enables the different ethnic and religious groups to at least coexist.
 
  
 
 Origin   Mid 17th century: from late Latin coexistere, from co- 'together' + existere 'exist', from ex- 'out' + sister 'take a stand'. Rhymes   assist, cist, consist, cyst, desist, enlist, exist, gist, grist, hist, insist, list, Liszt, mist, persist, resist, schist, subsist, tryst, twist, whist, wist, wrist    Definition of coexist in US English: coexistverbˌkōəɡˈzistˌkoʊəɡˈzɪst [no object]1Exist at the same time or in the same place.  traditional and modern values coexist in Africa  Example sentencesExamples -  This applies to all of us who try to coexist with animals.
 -  Here the rural and the urban seem to coexist in a certain harmony.
 -  Amazon plants, evergreen pines, basil and other strange flora coexisted in perfect harmony.
 -  And the new economy is here to stay and will coexist with the old one.
 -  I still cling to the idea that people are part of nature, and there must be some way we can coexist with the rest of it.
 -  Modern Western medical practices coexist with traditional healing methods and the use of medicinal plants.
 -  Traditional musical genres coexist with music performed by modern village orchestras.
 -  Some employees and students reported that feelings of sadness and hurt coexist with anger.
 -  She figured out a way that pillbugs could harmlessly coexist with a garden's plants.
 -  This is likely to be a logistical problem in areas where diarrhoea is common and coexists with cholera.
 -  Cancer can coexist with benign lesions, so complete assessment is necessary.
 -  Governments cannot coexist with forces that are hell bent on their destruction.
 -  Canal operators are finding new ways to do their maintenance work that could coexist with canal redevelopment.
 -  At first trams and trolley buses coexisted in a certain harmony, because each of the lines used one system exclusively.
 -  The low nutrient availability may allow stress-tolerant species to coexist with more ruderal species.
 -  Seeds at different developmental stages coexist at the same time on the plant, and even in a single inflorescence.
 -  Nobody has convincingly explained how the birds, bees, flowers and hares of the uplands can coexist with a new influx of humans.
 -  These trees evolved to coexist with regular fires, but today's larger fires pose a mortal threat to them.
 -  The company says the wind farm would coexist with existing agricultural practices supporting farm diversification.
 -  By adopting a muted form of cultural relativism, the scientific establishment seeks to coexist with other points of view.
 
  Synonyms occur with, co-occur with, coincide with, coexist with, go with, go along with, go together with, go hand in hand with, appear with - 1.1 (of nations or peoples) exist in mutual tolerance despite different ideologies or interests.
 the task of diplomacy was to help different states to coexist  Example sentencesExamples -  We've got to work out how you exist in a multicultural world, where diversity is respected, but where people are able to live in harmony and coexist.
 -  The two women had managed to coexist for a month now, and despite their differences, were inseparable friends.
 -  The religious believer can coexist harmoniously with the non-religious.
 -  Defeating the terrorists also means defeating their poisonous belief that peoples of different faiths and ethnic origins cannot coexist.
 -  The Nomads were the only other large group of people around, but they were so different from us that we could never hope to coexist.
 -  It sounds like it's a very international student body that has coexisted quite harmoniously.
 -  Initially, the Jewish settlers coexisted peacefully and harmoniously with the indigenous, partly nomadic Arab population.
 -  The different groups coexisted because Paul knew how to do it.
 -  It uses the mutual trust and mutual recognition of civil society as a way of helping identities and interests to coexist.
 -  Before anything else, the country must establish a system that enables the different ethnic and religious groups to at least coexist.
 -  I like movies that deal with people, especially people from different cultures coexisting and trying to get along.
 -  It's not just the history of the Christian population in Angamaly but also that of an area where people of different faiths coexist.
 -  The environment needs to be unquestionably safe for Mum and myself to coexist in harmony, and tensions were beginning to fray.
 -  He understands it to be a redundant, intolerant, expansionist ideology incapable of peacefully coexisting with other faiths.
 -  It does not follow that because southerners of different backgrounds exchanged traditions they always coexisted peacefully.
 -  It also created a climate of tolerance in which different ethnic and religious groups have been able to coexist.
 -  In some areas of human activity it is often very important that two mutually exclusive views be allowed to coexist in the interests of stability.
 -  I propose we consider the civilized Gandhian option of learning to respect each other and coexist in peace and harmony.
 -  Different religions coexisting in Kerala has been an inspiring experience to him.
 -  The piece reflected the identity of the contemporary Indian who coexists with persons of different faiths.
 
  
 
 Origin   Mid 17th century: from late Latin coexistere, from co- ‘together’ + existere ‘exist’, from ex- ‘out’ + sister ‘take a stand’.     |