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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Coexisted

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.

Wiktionary
coexisted

alt. (en-past of: coexist) vb. (en-past of: coexist)

Usage examples of "coexisted".

No one knows quite what the relationship was between australopithecines and Homo, but what is known is that they coexisted for something over a million years before all the australopithecines, robust and gracile alike, vanished mysteriously, and possibly abruptly, over a million years ago.

It is also known that Neandertals and modern humans coexisted in some fashion for tens of thousands of years in the Middle East.

For many generations, we have coexisted here, allowing your heresy in this ville.

Men and women who had peacefully coexisted in the enclosed ville all their lives now found that they hardly knew their neighbor at all.

We may doubt whether they have thus changed: if the Megatherium, Mylodon, Macrauchenia, and Toxodon had been brought to Europe from La Plata, without any information in regard to their geological position, no one would have suspected that they had coexisted with still living sea-shells.

Pure gift exchange coexisted with a monetary exchange, in which neoclassical market rationality, that is to say the profit mechanism, was bracketed and contained by society to direct it to serve higher values, such as justice and freedom.

They didn't touch them, of course-nothing could touch them-but the very matter of the wood coexisted with his eyeballs.

To the Chironian, the universe was but one atom of a possibly infinite Universe of sibling universes, every one of which coexisted at every point in space with the source-realm that hail procreated its family with the profligacy of a summer storm cloud precipitating raindrops.