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Definition of contemporaneous in English: contemporaneousadjectivekənˌtɛmpəˈreɪnɪəskɒnˌtɛmpəˈreɪnɪəskənˌtɛmpəˈreɪniəs Existing at or occurring in the same period of time. Pythagoras was contemporaneous with Buddha Example sentencesExamples - Both frameworks are described in the context of the contemporaneous social and political background.
- Ultimately, history is contemporaneous with the present, in the form of karmas by which all actions of the past live in the now.
- Well, it would have been cooler and so much more contemporaneous to like this album way back then.
- Finding contemporaneous material to accompany old movies is a challenge, I understand.
- At that meeting there was agreement in principle as to matters recorded by Mr Crossley in a contemporaneous manuscript note.
- Mr Lipman also produces his contemporaneous note recording the remark.
- The parallels to contemporaneous avant-garde film-makers and artists is striking.
- The overview referred to the previous month and was not wholly consistent with the tenor of the contemporaneous log for that period.
- So that is a contemporaneous update, your Honour, of present psychological state.
- It uses contemporaneous measures of both the cyclical unemployment rate measure and of inflation.
- All focus group discussions were transcribed and annotated with contemporaneous field notes.
- Mr Flynn provided the Tribunal with records of the phone calls and a copy of contemporaneous notes taken.
- We don't know, but it appears that it was made in contemporaneous time.
- It is also corroborated by most of the other contemporaneous documentary evidence.
- So measuring these elements will indicate if a group of bones are contemporaneous or of different periods.
- Unlike most fiction of the period, contemporaneous dates are emphasized.
- Mr. Ellice produced a contemporaneous note he claimed to support his version.
- Archaeologists are extremely cautious about making causal links between contemporaneous events.
- It is apparent that this note was not strictly contemporaneous in that it also refers to events which occurred later in the day.
- Following a planned visit to Italy to study the Baroque in art and the contemporaneous advances in medicine, Young intends to settle in Glasgow.
Derivatives nounkənˌtɛmpərəˈneɪɪtikənˌtɛmpərəˈniːɪti Dave mines the vernacular of popular culture and traditional imagery, filtering it through his contemporaneity as an artist of the South Asian diaspora. Example sentencesExamples - The present imperative of the objects of art historical fascination, their ineluctable contemporaneity, inevitably shapes the way in which we think about their role in their own historical horizon.
- In apprehending and responding to contemporaneity, Shahryar emerges as a poet who sharpens the contours of modernism by asserting the establishment of new poetics.
- The treatment gives it a contemporaneity, for, we live in a time that is marked by women's empowerment of every kind.
- The rooms are in styles of varying contemporaneity: ‘senior suites’, spacious and light-filled, bear the designer label, with art for sale on the walls.
- Their paintings were executed to be perceived as living art, and it is that dimension of their self-aware contemporaneity that still conveys a certain excitement.
- There are many reasons for this contemporaneity, but one of the most important obviously concerns technology.
- And I don't think deconstruction is the only answer to modernity or contemporaneity.
- Coherent ice-flow lines reconstructed from bedforms across the Irish lowlands indicate contemporaneity of drumlinization and moraine building in eastern and western Ireland.
- And it is at the same time what makes a writer most acutely conscious of his place in time, of his contemporaneity.
- The Hollywood novel's take on the relation between contemporaneity and tradition is more consistently comic and absurdist than the epic visions of modernism.
- In the contemporaneity of this art, he is a metaphor for timelessness.
- The postmodern moment in Hong Kong art took the form of a rejection of all master narratives, whether of Chineseness or of Western-centered conceptions of modernity or contemporaneity.
- Patches of contemporaneity sprouted here and there but the general concert menu had not changed in generations and, despite lavish subsidy, there was no public demand for reformation.
- Among all the contemporaneity we catch a momentary glimpse of old Devon, as it was fondly enshrined in Trollope's memory.
- The contemporaneity of different styles and movements, even within the work of a single artist, is one of the characteristics of post-war developments in the arts.
- In retrospect, the decision seems to have been a gratuitous gesture in the direction of relevance and contemporaneity.
- Made in the West, they are also a reminder that this script system inscribes the traditional richness of one of the world's influential cultures within the context of international contemporaneity.
- ‘The most modern of all poets,’ he called Donne, and it is precisely this sense of Donne's contemporaneity that links the diverse voices assembled here.
- Politically impartial juries would no doubt reach different conclusions depending on their contemporaneity.
adverbkənˌtɛmpəˈreɪnɪəsli I think we'll be hearing from John soon, but in the meantime, Mark has sent us his impressions of the trip, recorded contemporaneously. Example sentencesExamples - They wouldn't have been all contemporaneously working on it full-time.
- The guard recorded the incident contemporaneously in a sworn statement.
- The Spartans, just a hundred miles from Athens, contemporaneously developed such a public system.
- The programme, producers declare, will be ‘told contemporaneously through the main characters directly involved’.
- Answering these questions would help us understand how accounting concepts and techniques evolved contemporaneously with changes in technology and the world economy.
- Almost contemporaneously, another similar movement was taking place in the south under the vigorous direction of the Chalukyas.
- All these remedies could be exercised at any time or times simultaneously or contemporaneously or successively or not at all.
- His entire output, however, is song-saturated; many of his symphonies are thematically related to vocal material on which he was working contemporaneously.
- Damages are notionally intended to be such as will exhaust the fund, contemporaneously with the termination of the plaintiff's life expectancy.
- But at the end of the 17th century and during the early years of the 18th, two styles were in production contemporaneously and were sold alongside virtually identical imported wares.
- But contemporaneously with it, in the freer civil society of London, a modern form of theatre was beginning to emerge.
- Alternative forms of Black protest music emerging subsequent to bebop significantly influenced writers contemporaneously engaged in the process of provoking cultural evolution and revolution.
- There are also sites where garden beds and corn hills have been carefully arranged and give every indication of having been constructed and used contemporaneously by a single cultural group.
- That is, our understanding of how the parent influences the child is limited to portions of the parent's life course that are unfolding contemporaneously with the child's.
- Nurses reported that up to 60% of their medications are not recorded contemporaneously but are charted at shift end or post hoc by the nurse manager via global computer commands.
- I would have thought that a matter of that importance would inevitably have been recorded contemporaneously in the very full notes that are before the court.
- It's easy to forget that writers are readers, too, and that writing is a dual act - the act of putting the words down and the act of comprehending them both contemporaneously and after the fact.
- However, on further reflection and deliberation, I am prepared to accept the defendant's evidence that he did make the note contemporaneously with the meeting of October 10, 1997.
- First, we used data collected independently, but contemporaneously, from African-American male adolescents and their mothers.
noun The country then began to rub itself with the memory - emptying salve of contemporaneousness. Example sentencesExamples - The first film came out in December and because of the fraught political situation that we're familiar with on a daily basis, the books have a contemporaneousness that's accidental.
- Elizabeth Gaskell is insistent about the contemporaneousness of her 1854 narrative.
- Joe's condition, the seriousness of the wound, the relatively contemporaneousness of the statements and the dominance of the event all lead me to that conclusion.
Origin Mid 17th century: from Latin, from con- 'together with' + temporaneus (from tempus, tempor- 'time') + -ous. Rhymes cutaneous, extemporaneous, extraneous, instantaneous, miscellaneous, Pausanias, porcellaneous, simultaneous, spontaneous, subcutaneous Definition of contemporaneous in US English: contemporaneousadjectivekənˌtempəˈrānēəskənˌtɛmpəˈreɪniəs Existing or occurring in the same period of time. Pythagoras was contemporaneous with Buddha Example sentencesExamples - It is also corroborated by most of the other contemporaneous documentary evidence.
- All focus group discussions were transcribed and annotated with contemporaneous field notes.
- We don't know, but it appears that it was made in contemporaneous time.
- Archaeologists are extremely cautious about making causal links between contemporaneous events.
- Mr Lipman also produces his contemporaneous note recording the remark.
- So that is a contemporaneous update, your Honour, of present psychological state.
- So measuring these elements will indicate if a group of bones are contemporaneous or of different periods.
- The parallels to contemporaneous avant-garde film-makers and artists is striking.
- Mr. Ellice produced a contemporaneous note he claimed to support his version.
- Ultimately, history is contemporaneous with the present, in the form of karmas by which all actions of the past live in the now.
- Well, it would have been cooler and so much more contemporaneous to like this album way back then.
- At that meeting there was agreement in principle as to matters recorded by Mr Crossley in a contemporaneous manuscript note.
- Both frameworks are described in the context of the contemporaneous social and political background.
- Unlike most fiction of the period, contemporaneous dates are emphasized.
- It uses contemporaneous measures of both the cyclical unemployment rate measure and of inflation.
- Following a planned visit to Italy to study the Baroque in art and the contemporaneous advances in medicine, Young intends to settle in Glasgow.
- Mr Flynn provided the Tribunal with records of the phone calls and a copy of contemporaneous notes taken.
- The overview referred to the previous month and was not wholly consistent with the tenor of the contemporaneous log for that period.
- It is apparent that this note was not strictly contemporaneous in that it also refers to events which occurred later in the day.
- Finding contemporaneous material to accompany old movies is a challenge, I understand.
Origin Mid 17th century: from Latin, from con- ‘together with’ + temporaneus (from tempus, tempor- ‘time’) + -ous. |