| Webster's Online Dictionary |
| Part of Speech | Definition | |
| Verb | 1. Of Cohere.[Websters] 2. To be married or conciliated. [Eve - graph theoretic] 3. To have adhered, incorporated, enclosed, fixed or secured. [Eve - graph theoretic] 4. To be assorted or mixed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 5. To have agreed, corresponded, comported, cottoned or harmonized. [Eve - graph theoretic] 6. To be conjugated, jointed or seamed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 7. To have added or affixed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 8. To be interrelated. [Eve - graph theoretic] 9. To have participated or acceded. [Eve - graph theoretic] 10. To have accepted, collected or gathered.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Past Tense | 1. Past tense conjugation of the verb cohere.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Base (cohere) |
1. Come or be in close contact with; stick or hold together and resist separation; "The sushi rice grains cohere".[Wordnet]. 2. Cause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole; "Religion can cohere social groups".[Wordnet]. 3. Have internal elements or parts logically connected so that aesthetic consistency results; "the principles by which societies cohere".[Wordnet]. 4. Base verb from the following inflections: cohering, cohered, coheres, coherer, coherers, coheringly and coheredly.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
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Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license. |
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Date "Cohered" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1642. (references) |
| Part of Speech | Definition | |
| Verb | 1. Of Cohere.[Websters]
2. To be married or conciliated. [Eve - graph theoretic] 3. To have adhered, incorporated, enclosed, fixed or secured. [Eve - graph theoretic] 4. To be assorted or mixed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 5. To have agreed, corresponded, comported, cottoned or harmonized. [Eve - graph theoretic] 6. To be conjugated, jointed or seamed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 7. To have added or affixed. [Eve - graph theoretic] 8. To be interrelated. [Eve - graph theoretic] 9. To have participated or acceded. [Eve - graph theoretic] 10. To have accepted, collected or gathered.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Past Tense | 1. Past tense conjugation of the verb cohere.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
| Verb Base (cohere) | 1. Come or be in close contact with; stick or hold together and resist separation; "The sushi rice grains cohere".[Wordnet]. 2. Cause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole; "Religion can cohere social groups".[Wordnet]. 3. Have internal elements or parts logically connected so that aesthetic consistency results; "the principles by which societies cohere".[Wordnet]. 4. Base verb from the following inflections: cohering, cohered, coheres, coherer, coherers, coheringly and coheredly.[Eve - graph theoretic] | |
Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), compiled from various sources, under license. | Top | |
Date "COHERED" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1642. (references) |
| Domain | Definition | ||
| Noah Webster | 1: [Verb] To stick together; to cleave; to be united; to hold fast, as parts of the same mass, or as two substances that attract each other. Thus, particles of clay cohere; polished surfaces of bodies cohere.. | 2: [Verb] To be well connected; to follow regularly in the natural order; to be suited in connection; as the parts of a discourse, or as arguments in a train of reasoning.. Source: Webster's 1828 American Dictionary. | |
| Wiktionary | 1: [Verb] To be consistent as part of a group. Members of the party would cohere in the message they were sending. (references) | 2: [Verb] To stick together physically, by adhesion or figuratively by common purpose. Separate molecules will cohere because of electromagnetic force. (references) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | Top | ||