Concurrence definition

Concurrence





Home | Index


We love those sites:

4 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Concurrence \Con*cur"rence\, n. [F., competition, equality of
     rights, fr. LL. concurrentia competition.]
     1. The act of concurring; a meeting or coming together;
        union; conjunction; combination.
        [1913 Webster]
  


              We have no other measure but our own ideas, with the
              concurence of other probable reasons, to persuade
              us.                                   --Locke.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. A meeting of minds; agreement in opinion; union in design
        or act; -- implying joint approbation.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Tarquin the Proud was expelled by the universal
              concurrence of nobles and people.     --Swift.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. Agreement or consent, implying aid or contribution of
        power or influence; cooperation.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              We collect the greatness of the work, and the
              necessity of the divine concurrence to it. --Rogers.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              An instinct that works us to its own purposes
              without our concurrence.              --Burke.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     4. A common right; coincidence of equal powers; as, a
        concurrence of jurisdiction in two different courts.
        [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  concurrence
       n 1: agreement of results or opinions
       2: acting together as of agents or circumstances or events
       3: a state of cooperation [syn: {meeting of minds}]
       4: the temporal property of two things happening at the same
          time; "the interval determining the coincidence gate is
          adjustable" [syn: {coincidence}, {conjunction}, {co-occurrence}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

  228 Moby Thesaurus words for "concurrence":
     acceptance, accession, acclamation, accompaniment, accord,
     accordance, acquiescence, agglomeration, agglutination,
     aggregation, agreement, agreement in principle, agreement of all,
     alignment, alternation, analogy, approach, articulation,
     assemblage, assembly, assent, assentation, asymptote,
     bipartisanship, bond, bottleneck, bracketing, call-up, canvass,
     census, chorus, clustering, co-occurrence, coaction, coadjuvancy,
     coadministration, coagency, cochairmanship, codirectorship,
     coetaneity, coetaneousness, coevalneity, coevalness, coexistence,
     coextension, coincidence, collaboration, collaborativeness,
     collection, collectivism, colligation, collineation,
     collision course, collocation, collusion, combination,
     commensalism, common assent, common consent, common effort,
     common enterprise, communalism, communication, communism,
     communitarianism, community, comparison,
     complementary distribution, compliance, complicity, concatenation,
     concentralization, concentration, concert, concomitance,
     concomitancy, concord, concordance, concourse, confluence, conflux,
     congeries, conglomeration, congregation, congress, conjugation,
     conjunction, connection, consensus, consensus gentium,
     consensus of opinion, consensus omnium, consent, consentaneity,
     contemporaneity, contemporaneousness, convergence, converging,
     cooperation, cooperativeness, copulation, corralling, coupling,
     crossing, data-gathering, duet, duumvirate, ecumenicalism,
     ecumenicism, ecumenism, engagement, equidistance, esprit,
     esprit de corps, fellow feeling, fellowship, focalization, focus,
     funnel, gathering, general acclamation, general agreement,
     general consent, general voice, harmony, hearty assent, hookup,
     hub, ingathering, interaction, interchange, intercommunication,
     intercourse, interlacing, interlinking, intermeshing, interplay,
     intertwining, interweaving, interworking, inventory, isochronism,
     joinder, joining, joining of forces, joint effort, joint operation,
     jointure, junction, juxtaposition, knotting, liaison,
     like-mindedness, linkage, linking, marriage, mass action, meeting,
     meeting of minds, merger, merging, mesh, meshing, mobilization,
     morale, muster, mutual approach, mutual assistance,
     mutual understanding, mutualism, mutuality, narrowing gap,
     nondivergence, octet, one accord, one voice, pairing, parallelism,
     pooling, pooling of resources, pulling together, quartet,
     quid pro quo, quintet, radius, reciprocity, rodeo, roundup,
     same mind, seesaw, septet, sextet, simultaneity, single voice,
     solidarity, splice, spokes, support, survey, symbiosis,
     synchronism, synchronization, synergism, synergy, tangent,
     team spirit, teamwork, tie, tie-in, tie-up, tit for tat,
     togetherness, total agreement, trio, triumvirate, troika,
     unanimity, unanimousness, understanding, unification, union,
     unison, united action, universal agreement, warm assent, welcome,
     withness, yoking
  
  

From Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856) [bouvier]:

  CONCURRENCE, French law. The equality of rights, or privilege which several 
  persons-have over the same thing; as, for example, the right which two 
  judgment creditors, Whose judgments were rendered at the same time, have to 
  be paid out of the proceeds of real estate bound by them. Dict. de Jur. h.t. 
  
  

















Powered by Blog Dictionary [BlogDict]
Kindly supported by Vaffle Invitation Code Get a Freelance Job - Outsource Your Projects | Threadless Coupon
All rights reserved. (2008-2024)