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coincide

/koh-in-sahyd/US // ˌkoʊ ɪnˈsaɪd //UK // (ˌkəʊɪnˈsaɪd) //

重合,吻合,相符,巧合

Related Words

Definitions

v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    co·in·cid·ed, co·in·cid·ing.

    • : to occupy the same place in space, the same point or period in time, or the same relative position: The centers of concentric circles coincide. Our vacations coincided this year.
    • : to correspond exactly, as in nature, character, etc.: His vocation coincides with his avocation.
    • : to agree or concur, as in thought or opinion: Their opinions always coincide.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • This uptick coincided with a series of economic downturns in the United States.

  • Unfortunately, this only worked for a little while, as our launch coincided with the new era of mega food delivery platforms like DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Postmates.

  • Yes, the Dow fell in the last half-hour of trade, coinciding with the historic “insurrection” vote, but the real test comes in the Senate—whenever that may be.

  • That’s long been the case in Seattle, where Amazon’s growth from startup to the biggest corporate tenant of any major American city coincided with a boom that turned a relatively affordable housing market into one nation’s priciest.

  • In time, those Unconscionable Maps no longer satisfied, and the Cartographers Guilds struck a Map of the Empire whose size was that of the Empire, and which coincided point for point with it.

  • These numbers coincide with balooning business for wildlife poaching, which is now a$300 billion industry.

  • To coincide with the launch of the DS in 2004, the company released Super Mario 64 DS, a remake of the beloved Super Mario 64.

  • The theme park is expected to open in 2015 to coincide with the World Expo in Milan.

  • One way to start: Time the release of the Senate report to coincide with the release of a CIA rebuttal.

  • In fact, although Saudi Arabia and Israel are technically enemies, their interests coincide very closely in Syria.

  • There was but one man in the camp who did not coincide in those glittering visions.

  • However, as our opinions coincide upon the passage in question, I am not disposed to pick a quarrel with him.

  • As causes precede effects, the causal order and the time order generally coincide.

  • Virtue conducts not to happiness, nor crime to retribution: conscience has one logic, fate another; and neither coincide.

  • But neither of these periods, can be truly said to coincide with the probable era of the chief's historical reminiscences.