Word of the Day Archive
Saturday July 1, 2000

concomitant \kuhn-KOM-uh-tuhnt\, adjective:
1. Accompanying; attendant; occurring or existing concurrently.

noun:
1. Something that accompanies or is collaterally connected with something else; an accompaniment.

For a filmmaker so obsessed with these issues, it is a sad irony that his fear of things going wrong--and his concomitant mania for clockwork control--should have been a major reason for the failure of . . . his final film.
-- Michiko Kakutani, "A Connoisseur of Cool Tries to Raise the Temperature", New York Times, July 18, 1999

In short, the inevitable concomitant of autocracy . . . is aggression and imperialism.
-- Martin Malia, Russia Under Western Eyes

Concomitant comes from the present participle of Latin concomitari, to accompany, from com- (used intensively) + comitari, to accompany, from comes, comit-, a companion.

Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for concomitant

 

Share This:  Share This: del.icio.usShare This: digg.comShare This: FacebookShare This: furl.netShare This: www.netscape.comShare This: myweb2.search.yahoo.comShare This: www.stumbleupon.comShare This: www.google.comShare This: www.technorati.comShare This: blinklist.comShare This: newsvine.comShare This: ma.gnolia.comShare This: reddit.comShare This: favorites.live.comShare This: tailrank.com