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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
cogent
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
argument
▪ Defence could muster cogent arguments to maintain an unusually high level of expenditure.
case
▪ Screening for prostatic cancer Editor, - Fritz H Schröder makes a cogent case against widespread screening for cancer of the prostate.
reason
▪ There are cogent reasons why the constitution drafters decided to generalize rather than to particularize.
▪ There are some cogent reasons for using paper sludge, he claims.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The court will require clear, cogent evidence before its decision can be changed.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ His assessment may be the most cogent and logical around today.
▪ On the threshold of war there is always cogent justification for entering it.
▪ The orchestra is severely stretched to maintain any sort of cogent line, and the fantasy of the work is all but lost.
▪ There are cogent reasons why the constitution drafters decided to generalize rather than to particularize.
▪ There are some cogent reasons for using paper sludge, he claims.
▪ We read no cogent outcries from illiterates.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Cogent

Cogent \Co"gent\, a. [L. cogens, p. pr. of cogere to drive together, to force; co- + agere to drive. See Agent, a., and cf. Coact to force, Coagulate, p. a.]

  1. Compelling, in a physical sense; powerful. [Obs.]

    The cogent force of nature.
    --Prior.

  2. Having the power to compel conviction or move the will; constraining; conclusive; forcible; powerful; not easily reasisted.

    No better nor more cogent reason.
    --Dr. H. More.

    Proofs of the most cogent description.
    --Tyndall.

    The tongue whose strains were cogent as commands, Revered at home, and felt in foreign lands.
    --Cowper.

    Syn: Forcible; powerful; potent; urgent; strong; persuasive; convincing; conclusive; influential.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
cogent

1650s, from French cogent "necessary, urgent" (14c.), from Latin cogentem (nominative cogens), present participle of cogere "to curdle; to compel; to collect," literally "to drive together," from com- "together" (see co-) + agere "to drive" (see act (n.)).

Wiktionary
cogent

a. 1 reasonable and convincing; based on evidence. 2 appealing to the intellect or powers of reasoning. 3 forcefully persuasive.

WordNet
cogent
  1. adj. having the power to influence or convince; "a cogent analysis of the problem"; "potent arguments" [syn: potent, powerful]

  2. powerfully persuasive; "a cogent argument"; "a telling presentation"; "a weighty argument" [syn: telling, weighty]

Wikipedia
CoGeNT

The CoGeNT experiment has searched for dark matter. It uses a single germanium crystal (~100 grams) as a cryogenic detector for WIMP particles. CoGeNT has operated in the Soudan Underground Laboratory since 2009.

Usage examples of "cogent".

They resumed a discussion interrupted a day or two before, and, as they passed the end of Newport Street, Bunce asked his companion to enter for the purpose of looking at a certain paper in which he had found what seemed to him cogent arguments.

We should require that our ultimate theory give a cogent cosmology within our universe.

Could we see as cogent a motive for asseverating his guilt as we find for his insisting upon his innocence, we should lend as much credence to the one as to the other.

The buggers have made cephaline cogents out of large dogs, a cheetah, even some chimps and gorillas.

There is no careful series of deconstructionist moves in the narrative of the woman doctor, but she nonetheless undercuts the cherished ideals of male friendship, beats the seducer at his own game, and shows the most cogent, aggressive, and pragmatic thinking in a story that is otherwise male dominated.

If that reason does not strike you as a cogent one, I am sorry, for to me it appears unanswerable.

This was the dignified, the earnest Ziggy, who sometimes came out for a curtain speech in which he begged people to give generously to the Red Cross, or to remember an orphanage at Christmas, his plea made all the more cogent by that hoarse and helpless delivery, reminding them that under the motley of a clown might beat the heart of a frustrated crusader.

Get me a complete list of all the internationally known scientists who have died since the first of May, together with every cogent detail you can rake up.

An audience, understand, wholly incapable of self-realization or cogent articulation, and thus possessors of depressingly vulgar tastes when not apprised of what they like, if only they knew it.

Meanwhile Congress remains unable to pass a cogent, equitable and humane law.

As the Old Mess had told him, it was already written in his head, but what is written in the head is always so much more cogent and firmly expressed than what at last appears upon the page.

The fact that an admiral of the fleet was practically leaning on his elbow was less than conducive to cogent thought.

Beware of a reaction which typically afflicts sorcerers--a frustrating desire to explain the sorcery experience in cogent, well-reasoned terms.

Or does my friend think that by aspersing a witness for the prosecution he will shake the evidence, the abundant and cogent evidence, against his client?

Qwilleran thanked Breze for his cogent opinions and delivered the tape to the paper.