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Sentences with coterminous

co·ter·mi·nous
C c
  • The chief legacy of the Tudors in terms of state formation was perhaps to create the circumstances in which a multiple monarchy coterminous with the British Isles emerged in 1603.
  • The irony was that this glorification of the individual was coterminous with its complete obliteration.
  • His affiliation, while always biological, coterminously refers to social alliances.
  • All three elements exist coterminously, though in varying strengths.
  • And the consciousness of happiness or pain, as has already been hinted at, is the central moral index for most liberals - it is almost coterminous with our definition of being human.
  • Unless something extraordinary was to be done, he will be asking for a stay that will go almost coterminously with the trial protocol.
  • Evidently the boundaries of the ‘self’ so conceived is not coterminous with an individual's own skin.
  • This process is to a large extent coterminous with bodily decomposition, which is the obverse of gestation.
  • The map showed clearly that the distribution of oak trees is coterminous with the locations of the settled civilizations of Asia, Europe, and North America.
  • The boundaries of constituencies in both parliaments would be coterminous in order to allow clear local political accountability.
  • At the very core of the principle of universal access is the idea that access is coterminous with being a ‘stake-holder’ in the matter being discussed.
  • This influence is not coterminous with national territorial boundaries, however.
  • Most local histories end on an elegiac note, mourning the decline of the ‘community’ which, they imply, was once coterminous with their locality.
  • The boundaries of the committees are coterminous with the 42 police services operating in the same area.
  • What I loved about the books that I was being read was they seemed to belong to no real world, because nothing in them physically was coterminous with anything I knew.
  • It only emerges when sovereignty is not coterminous with the boundaries of the major political units which constitute the system.
  • Now that consumer demand is tailing off, as people find they are obliged finally to repay their bills and cover their costs, there has coterminously been a surge in home repossessions.
  • This was the era when the game was the near-exclusive preserve of British and Irish players, many of whose attitudes and preoccupations were coterminous with the often tough, uncompromising fans who paid to watch them.
  • Thus, during the pre-War period we have three coterminous movements instigated by the money poured into the area by outsiders wishing to climb the higher Himalayan peaks, especially Everest.
  • In particular, political space and political community are no longer coterminous with national territory, and national governments can no longer be regarded as the sole masters of their own or their citizens' fate.
  • Unmatched in the variety and number of its megafauna, the park shelters the world's largest concentration of elk and is one of the last remaining strongholds of the grizzly bear in the coterminous states.
  • The fiction that we are not coterminous with ourselves comes early to some and perhaps never or only hazily to others.
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