concomitate
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]concomitate (third-person singular simple present concomitates, present participle concomitating, simple past and past participle concomitated)
- (transitive) To accompany; to be somehow connected with.
- 1638, Sir Thomas Herbert, Some years travels into divers parts of Asia and Afrique:
- […] spouting part of the briny Ocean in wantonnesse out of their oylie pipes bored by nature atop their prodigious ſhoulders, like ſo many floating Ilands concomitating us.
- 1672, Gideon Harvey, Morbus Anglicus, Or, The Anatomy of Consumptions:
- This simple spectation of the lungs is differenced from that which concomitates a pleurisy.
Latin
[edit]Participle
[edit]concomitāte