释义 |
Definition of concur in English: concurverbconcurred, concurring, concurs kənˈkəːkənˈkər [no object]1Be of the same opinion; agree. the authors concurred with the majority with direct speech ‘That's right,’ the chairman concurred Example sentencesExamples - Justice White concurred in Griswold, reasoning that the Court should instead strike down the state law.
- The opinion concurred in a judgment striking down New Jersey's partial birth abortion statute.
- All those speaking on the panel concurred that the rise in ecotourism has coincided with a major shift in the approach to development.
- The Constitution prohibits the presence of foreign troops in the country except under a treaty concurred in by the Senate or ratified by the people in a referendum if Congress so desires.
- Thomas and Scalia concurred in the judgment, and wrote separate opinions explaining why.
- Provost Berry concurred in the dean's position.
- A third judge agreed with the result and concurred in nearly all of the reasoning.
- After stating that it fully concurred in the holding and reasoning of the district court, the Supreme Court proceeded to develop arguments in different directions.
- However, in the leading speech, concurred in by the whole House, Lord Mackay of Clashfern returned to the subject, at p 955F.
- Lord Steyn concurred in the result, but on grounds of remoteness rather than of the non-existence of a cause of action.
- Because Justice Kirby ultimately withdrew his Honour's reasons and concurred in the judgment of Justices Toohey and Gaudron, the ratio of the case is to be found in their Honours' judgment.
- Most also concur that these objectives clashed with Western ideals, economic objectives, and security requirements.
- He also said that Crean concurred in this course of action.
- The American and the Swiss judges concurred in disqualifying Pladner for a low left hook which floored Genaro for the count in the fifth, but the French judge refused to agree, declaring that Pladner had won every round.
- In contrast to their behavior before Dred Scott, both Catron and Campbell joined the majority; the latter even explicitly concurred in the result.
- The Grievance Committee and the two hearing panels apparently concurred in this opinion.
- Justice O'Connor separately concurred in the case.
- Justice O'Connor delivered a separate opinion, in which she concurred in the outcome of the case, but not with the majority's reasoning.
- These parents concurred in their belief that many parents were concerned with their jobs and that those jobs came before their involvement in their children's school.
- Although only Lord Scott dissented as to result, Lord Rodger, who concurred in holding that the Court of Appeal should not have interfered with the judge's decision, can be regarded as dissenting also in relation to the dicta.
Synonyms agree, be in agreement, be in accord, be in accordance, accord, go along, fall in, be in harmony, be in sympathy see eye to eye, be of the same mind, be of the same opinion - 1.1concur with Agree with (a decision or opinion)
we strongly concur with this recommendation Example sentencesExamples - I also concur with Chris's high assessment of this opinion piece on the Iraq war by arch-conservative poet Les Murray.
- One judge primarily concurred with the majority but dissented from their decision that the plaintiffs could not seek declaratory and injunctive relief.
- And when he concurred with things he was decisive.
- In Zambia, abortion is legal but four doctors and a woman's husband must concur with the woman's decision.
- Lord Nolan concurred with most of Lord Browne-Wilkinson's opinion but dissented on one matter, considered further below.
- It was a decision made by the chief justice and concurred with by every member of the Senate.
- Jen stood still for a moment pondering whether or not she should concur with his impulsive decision.
- While other acupuncturists concur with his opinion, some feel that the entire experience varies from patient to patient.
- The Commission concurred with the international consensus that those who were fighting for a just cause were under an obligation to employ just means in the conduct of this fight.
- Eight of Mr. Daly's eleven colleagues concurred with his opinion.
- Overall, it could be said that adjudicator Beryl Dixon's awards concurred with popular opinion.
- We do not concur with the opinions that have just been expressed by other parties in this Committee.
- Almost always, the opinion of the expert committee concurs with that of the public.
- Individuals were summoned to advise the sovereign and they were under no obligation to concur with the opinions of others.
- For the avoidance of doubt this communication is not to be taken that we accept or concur with your appointment.
- Unless Celtic boss Martin O'Neill can prove otherwise in the coming months, conventional footballing wisdom concurs with the blokes in the light blue tops, to wit: ‘There's only one team in Scotland.’
- While I don't agree with everything in Anderson's book, I do concur with her general overview and much of her critique.
- Mr Connolly concurred with the opinion of several taxi drivers that there are safety issues regarding drivers leaving the taxi to knock at the front door.
- We concur with their observations in respect of the installation of floor coverings on this contract, but would like to add the following.
- Senior Judge Williams concurred with most of the opinion.
Synonyms permit, consent to, agree to, allow, assent to, give one's consent to, accept, concur with, give one's assent to, give one's blessing to, say yes to, give the nod to, give one's approval to
2Happen or occur at the same time; coincide. in tests, cytogenetic determination has been found to concur with enzymatic determination Example sentencesExamples - The fact that multiple causes may have effectuated the loss does not negate any single cause; the fact that multiple acts concurred in infliction of injury does not nullify any single contributory act.
- Both actus reus and mens rea must concur at the same time!
Synonyms coincide, happen/occur together, happen/occur simultaneously, happen/occur at the same time, be simultaneous, be concurrent, synchronize, coexist clash
Origin Late Middle English (also in the senses 'collide' and 'act in combination'): from Latin concurrere 'run together, assemble in crowds', from con- 'together with' + currere 'to run'. cursor from Middle English: Nowadays we call the movable indicator on our computer screen the cursor. In medieval English a cursor was a running messenger: it is a borrowing of the Latin word for ‘a runner’, and comes from currere ‘to run’. From the late 16th century cursor became the term for a sliding part of a slide rule or other instrument, marked with a line for pinpointing the position on a scale that you want, the forerunner of the computing sense. Currere is the source of very many English words including course (Middle English) something you run along; concourse (Late Middle English) originally a crowd who had ‘run together’; current (Middle English) originally meaning ‘running, flowing’; discursive (late 16th century) running away from the point; excursion (late 16th century) running out to see things; intercourse (Late Middle English) originally an exchange running between people; and precursor (Late Middle English) one who goes before; as well as supplying the cur part of concur (Late Middle English); incur (Late Middle English); occur (Late Middle English) (from ob- ‘against’); and recur (Middle English).
Rhymes à deux, agent provocateur, astir, auteur, aver, bestir, blur, bon viveur, burr, Chandigarh, coiffeur, confer, connoisseur, cordon-bleu, cri de cœur, cur, danseur, Darfur, defer, demur, de rigueur, deter, entrepreneur, er, err, farceur, faute de mieux, fir, flâneur, Fleur, force majeure, fur, hauteur, her, infer, inter, jongleur, Kerr, littérateur, longueur, masseur, Monseigneur, monsieur, Montesquieu, Montreux, murre, myrrh, occur, pas de deux, Pasteur, per, pisteur, poseur, pot-au-feu, prefer, prie-dieu, pudeur, purr, raconteur, rapporteur, refer, répétiteur, restaurateur, saboteur, sabreur, seigneur, Sher, shirr, sir, skirr, slur, souteneur, spur, stir, tant mieux, transfer, Ur, vieux jeu, voyageur, voyeur, were, whirr Definition of concur in US English: concurverbkənˈkərkənˈkər [no object]1Be of the same opinion; agree. the authors concurred with the majority “That's right,” the chairman concurred they concurred in the creation of the disciplinary procedures Example sentencesExamples - Thomas and Scalia concurred in the judgment, and wrote separate opinions explaining why.
- Although only Lord Scott dissented as to result, Lord Rodger, who concurred in holding that the Court of Appeal should not have interfered with the judge's decision, can be regarded as dissenting also in relation to the dicta.
- All those speaking on the panel concurred that the rise in ecotourism has coincided with a major shift in the approach to development.
- Justice White concurred in Griswold, reasoning that the Court should instead strike down the state law.
- Most also concur that these objectives clashed with Western ideals, economic objectives, and security requirements.
- He also said that Crean concurred in this course of action.
- Provost Berry concurred in the dean's position.
- Lord Steyn concurred in the result, but on grounds of remoteness rather than of the non-existence of a cause of action.
- In contrast to their behavior before Dred Scott, both Catron and Campbell joined the majority; the latter even explicitly concurred in the result.
- A third judge agreed with the result and concurred in nearly all of the reasoning.
- The Grievance Committee and the two hearing panels apparently concurred in this opinion.
- The opinion concurred in a judgment striking down New Jersey's partial birth abortion statute.
- The American and the Swiss judges concurred in disqualifying Pladner for a low left hook which floored Genaro for the count in the fifth, but the French judge refused to agree, declaring that Pladner had won every round.
- Justice O'Connor delivered a separate opinion, in which she concurred in the outcome of the case, but not with the majority's reasoning.
- These parents concurred in their belief that many parents were concerned with their jobs and that those jobs came before their involvement in their children's school.
- The Constitution prohibits the presence of foreign troops in the country except under a treaty concurred in by the Senate or ratified by the people in a referendum if Congress so desires.
- Justice O'Connor separately concurred in the case.
- Because Justice Kirby ultimately withdrew his Honour's reasons and concurred in the judgment of Justices Toohey and Gaudron, the ratio of the case is to be found in their Honours' judgment.
- After stating that it fully concurred in the holding and reasoning of the district court, the Supreme Court proceeded to develop arguments in different directions.
- However, in the leading speech, concurred in by the whole House, Lord Mackay of Clashfern returned to the subject, at p 955F.
Synonyms agree, be in agreement, be in accord, be in accordance, accord, go along, fall in, be in harmony, be in sympathy - 1.1concur with Agree with (a decision, opinion, or finding)
we strongly concur with this recommendation Example sentencesExamples - Eight of Mr. Daly's eleven colleagues concurred with his opinion.
- I also concur with Chris's high assessment of this opinion piece on the Iraq war by arch-conservative poet Les Murray.
- Jen stood still for a moment pondering whether or not she should concur with his impulsive decision.
- We concur with their observations in respect of the installation of floor coverings on this contract, but would like to add the following.
- In Zambia, abortion is legal but four doctors and a woman's husband must concur with the woman's decision.
- Individuals were summoned to advise the sovereign and they were under no obligation to concur with the opinions of others.
- Mr Connolly concurred with the opinion of several taxi drivers that there are safety issues regarding drivers leaving the taxi to knock at the front door.
- It was a decision made by the chief justice and concurred with by every member of the Senate.
- Senior Judge Williams concurred with most of the opinion.
- While I don't agree with everything in Anderson's book, I do concur with her general overview and much of her critique.
- For the avoidance of doubt this communication is not to be taken that we accept or concur with your appointment.
- Almost always, the opinion of the expert committee concurs with that of the public.
- One judge primarily concurred with the majority but dissented from their decision that the plaintiffs could not seek declaratory and injunctive relief.
- Lord Nolan concurred with most of Lord Browne-Wilkinson's opinion but dissented on one matter, considered further below.
- The Commission concurred with the international consensus that those who were fighting for a just cause were under an obligation to employ just means in the conduct of this fight.
- And when he concurred with things he was decisive.
- Overall, it could be said that adjudicator Beryl Dixon's awards concurred with popular opinion.
- Unless Celtic boss Martin O'Neill can prove otherwise in the coming months, conventional footballing wisdom concurs with the blokes in the light blue tops, to wit: ‘There's only one team in Scotland.’
- We do not concur with the opinions that have just been expressed by other parties in this Committee.
- While other acupuncturists concur with his opinion, some feel that the entire experience varies from patient to patient.
Synonyms permit, consent to, agree to, allow, assent to, give one's consent to, accept, concur with, give one's assent to, give one's blessing to, say yes to, give the nod to, give one's approval to
2Happen or occur at the same time; coincide. in tests, cytogenetic determination has been found to concur with enzymatic determination Example sentencesExamples - The fact that multiple causes may have effectuated the loss does not negate any single cause; the fact that multiple acts concurred in infliction of injury does not nullify any single contributory act.
- Both actus reus and mens rea must concur at the same time!
Synonyms coincide, happen together, occur together, happen simultaneously, occur simultaneously, happen at the same time, occur at the same time, be simultaneous, be concurrent, synchronize, coexist
Origin Late Middle English (also in the senses ‘collide’ and ‘act in combination’): from Latin concurrere ‘run together, assemble in crowds’, from con- ‘together with’ + currere ‘to run’. |