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View synonyms for contemporary
contemporary
[ kuhn-tem-puh-rer-ee ]
adjective
- existing, occurring, or living at the same time; belonging to the same time:
Newton's discovery of the calculus was contemporary with that of Leibniz.
Synonyms: coexistent, simultaneous, concurrent
- of about the same age or date:
a Georgian table with a contemporary wig stand.
- of the present time; modern:
a lecture on the contemporary novel.
noun
, plural con·tem·po·rar·ies.
- a person belonging to the same time or period with another or others.
- a person of the same age as another.
contemporary
/ kənˈtɛmprərɪ /
adjective
- belonging to the same age; living or occurring in the same period of time
- existing or occurring at the present time
- conforming to modern or current ideas in style, fashion, design, etc
- having approximately the same age as one another
noun
- a person living at the same time or of approximately the same age as another
- something that is contemporary
- journalism a rival newspaper
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Usage
Since contemporary can mean either of the same period or of the present period, it is best to avoid this word where ambiguity might arise, as in a production of Othello in contemporary dress. Modern dress or Elizabethan dress should be used in this example to avoid ambiguity
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Derived Forms
- conˈtemporarily, adverb
- conˈtemporariness, noun
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Other Words From
- con·tempo·rari·ly adverb
- con·tempo·rari·ness noun
- noncon·tempo·rary adjective noun plural noncontemporaries
- postcon·tempo·rary adjective
- ultra·con·tempo·rary adjective noun plural ultracontemporaries
- uncon·tempo·rary adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of contemporary1
First recorded in 1625–35; from Late Latin contemporārius, equivalent to Latin con- con- ( def ) + tempor- (stem of tempus “time”; temporal 1( def ) ) + -ārius -ary ( def )
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Word History and Origins
Origin of contemporary1
C17: from Medieval Latin contemporārius, from Latin com- together + temporārius relating to time, from tempus time
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Synonym Study
Contemporary, contemporaneous, coeval, coincident all mean happening or existing at the same time. Contemporary often refers to persons or their acts or achievements: Hemingway and Fitzgerald, though contemporary, shared few values. Contemporaneous is applied chiefly to events: the rise of industrialism, contemporaneous with the spread of steam power. Coeval refers either to very long periods of time—an era or an eon—or to remote or long ago times: coeval stars, shining for millenia with equal brilliance; coeval with the dawning of civilization. Coincident means occurring at the same time but without causal or other relationships: prohibition, coincident with the beginning of the 1920s.
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