1. concomitant - Noun
2. concomitant - Adjective
3. concomitant - Adjective Satellite
Accompanying; conjoined; attending.
One who, or that which, accompanies, or is collaterally connected with another; a companion; an associate; an accompaniment.
Source: Webster's dictionaryIt was a great image, especially for areas where there was strong Muslim influence and the concomitant view prevailed that women had no souls. John Brunner
Each action of the actor on the stage should be the visible concomitant of his thoughts. Sarah Bernhardt
We see in the electroencephalogram a concomitant phenomenon of the continuous nerve processes which take place in the brain, exactly as the electrocardiogram represents a concomitant phenomenon of the contractions of the individual segments of the heart. Hans Berger
Care for life and physical health, with due regard for the needs of others and the common good, is concomitant with respect for human dignity. Salvatore J. Cordileone
Doors are opening now that were not open in the past, and the great challenge facing minority groups is to be ready to enter these doors as they open. No greater tragedy could befall us at this hour but that of allowing new opportunities to emerge with out the concomitant preparedness to meet them. Martin Luther King Jr.
...body with a concomitant object of gratification, the desire for immortality is in itself the evidence of immortality, as is the existence of its sister state, immutability. Jeet Thayil