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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
coexist
verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Can the two countries ever coexist peacefully?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And yet this gangsta poise coexists with a weirdly playful quality.
▪ Despite the Hinduism of most Tamils and the Buddhism of most Sinhalese, they coexisted for those two millennia without much hostility.
▪ Each approach has its advantages, and these and other options may coexist in the network of tomorrow.
▪ It is possible for such sentiments of approval of this past to coexist with abhorrence for most current acts of violence.
▪ River and sea now coexist by the rules of a peculiar estuarine current.
▪ The professors laugh at the irony but ignore the message-that academic skills and fighting skills may not often coexist.
▪ The work of Coleridge, Keats, and Shelley coexisted with the misery described by Blake.
▪ The work of Tennyson coexisted with the devastation of an urban underclass described by Dickens.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Coexist

Coexist \Co`ex*ist\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Coexisted; p. pr. & vb. n. Coexisting.] To exist at the same time; -- sometimes followed by with.

Of substances no one has any clear idea, farther than of certain simple ideas coexisting together.
--Locke.

So much purity and integrity . . . coexisting with so much decay and so many infirmities.
--Warburton.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
coexist

1670s, from co- + exist. Of political/economic systems (especially with reference to communism and the West) from 1931. Related: Coexisted; coexisting.

Wiktionary
coexist

alt. (context intransitive of two or more things, people, concepts, etc. English) To exist contemporaneously or in the same are

  1. v

  2. (context intransitive of two or more things, people, concepts, et

  3. English) To exist contemporaneously or in the same area.

WordNet
coexist
  1. v. coexist peacefully, as of nations

  2. exist together

Wikipedia
Coexist (album)

Coexist is the second studio album by English indie pop band the xx. After a break from touring for their 2009 debut album xx, the band members began to write songs individually before they recorded Coexist from November 2011 to May 2012. For the album, the xx drew on personal experiences for their songwriting, while their music was influenced by the electronic dance scene that occurred when they had been away on tour. The album was produced by the band's Jamie xx, who had pursued electronic dance on other projects and developed as a DJ prior to the album.

Coexist features a minimalist musical style with spatial arrangements, loose song structure, little dynamism, and experimentation with tension. Its songs are characterised by sparse elements such as simple chord progression, keyboard ostinatos, and fading motifs, while Jamie xx's production incorporates both programmed beats and live percussion instruments. Coexist touches on themes of heartbreak, loneliness, and intimacy. The lyrics, written by guitarist Romy Madley Croft and bassist Oliver Sim, address a failing relationship and changes in a romance with inner monologues and simple metaphors.

When Coexist was released on 5 September 2012 by Young Turks, it received generally positive reviews from critics and debuted at number one on the United Kingdom's Official Albums Chart, selling 58,266 copies in its first week there. It also charted in the top 10 in several other countries and was promoted with four singles, including " Angels" and " Chained". During June to December 2012, the xx toured in support of the album throughout Europe and North America.

Coexist

Coexist may refer to:

  • Coexist (album), a 2012 album by The xx
  • Coexist Foundation, a charitable organization based in London, England
  • Coexist (image)
Coexist (image)

The Coexist image (often styled as "CoeXisT" or "COEXIST") is an image created by Polish, Warsaw-based graphic designer Piotr Młodożeniec in 2000 as an entry in an international art competition sponsored by the Museum on the Seam for Dialogue, Understanding and Coexistence. The original version was one of dozens of works displayed as large outdoor posters in Jerusalem in 2001.

Variations of this artwork have been used as bumper stickers and elements in rock concerts.

Usage examples of "coexist".

The only thing we know at the moment, in all certainty, is that in Western culture the being of man and the being of language have never, at any time, been able to coexist and to articulate themselves one upon the other.

The two forms of ceratopsids appear to have coexisted, at least on the floodplains of Alberta and in Montana.

Can the golfers and the crofters whose animals graze on the course find a way to coexist peacefully?

That scientists could confront the faunal evidence at Changyang without even considering the possibility that Homo sapiens coexisted in China with Homo erectus is amazing.

Either of these abilities can coexist in varying degrees of strength with abilities such as clairvoyance, precognition, retrocognition, psychokinesis, or the more specialized Gifts.

In other words, tachyons and tardyons must coexist everywhere and are merely different expressions of identical phenomena.

A little over a week later, they reached a much bigger canyon, a wide, rugged gorge through whose bottom ran a quiet river, where pine trees and actus coexisted along the sandy banks and birds twittered in hidden crevices among the rocks.

Hilaire has forcibly remarked, that certain malconformations very frequently, and that others rarely coexist, without our being able to assign any reason.

Caliphate mathematical technique to establish a metastable equilibrium that allows convex regions with real and virtual histories to coexist in four-dimensional space-time, while remaining both topologically distinct and contiguous in five-space.

What we are insisting on is thisscientists should not propose that the hominids definitely did not coexist simply on the basis of their morphological diversity.

The model that Washington should use as it studies the future of the Central Asia region, as well as that of the emerging new Middle East, is not that of a new Moslem empire but that of a multinational and multiethnic mosaic, in which political, military, and economic cooperation will coexist with chaotic ethnic and religious rivalries, not necessarily between Christians and Moslems and certainly not as a result of religious subversion by one player, such as Iran.

Increasingly, he was beginning to think that the infinity of variants coexisted in one vast superposition, stacked like a series of clear overlays, varying very little from one to the next, but gradually shading into major differences.

As might be expected, these local spinnings are most apt to occur in the season when the air next the earth is relatively warm, and they are aptest to take place in the half of the advancing front lying between the east and south, for the reason that there the highest temperatures and the greatest humidity are likely to coexist.

This kind of writing has coexisted with the Chekhovian kind for a number of decades, and if, as many have noted, the attenuated and formulaic New Yorker story represents the final stage of the older form, it may be that the Kafkan mode is gaining ascendancy over modern tastes.

Some of its young would probably inherit the same habits or structure, and by the repetition of this process, a new variety might be formed which would either supplant or coexist with the parent-form of wolf.