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coeval
[ koh-ee-vuhl ]
adjective
- of the same age, date, or duration; equally old:
Analysis has proved that this manuscript is coeval with that one.
Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo were only approximately coeval.
noun
- a contemporary:
He is more serious than his coevals.
coeval
/ ˌkəʊɪˈvælɪtɪ; kəʊˈiːvəl /
adjective
- of or belonging to the same age or generation
noun
- a contemporary
Derived Forms
- coˈevally, adverb
- coevality, noun
Other Words From
- co·e·val·i·ty [koh-i-, val, -i-tee], noun
- co·eval·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of coeval1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Beyond being triggering to my fertility-challenged coevals, it is absurd to assume that one's life — or one's child's life — is incomplete without a sibling.
Such as it is today, it already was when the Fiat Lux was spoken; its beginning must have been coeval with that of time.
Notably, the same pattern has been observed among dogs as compared to their wild coevals, the wolf: scientists note that dogs' brains are about 30% smaller relative to wolves' brains.
Likewise, undergraduates at UC Santa Cruz have come out en masse in support of their graduate coevals.
Not one's “coevals” or “co-equals,” but followers — a telling word that recalls cults.
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