Thesaurus.com
Dictionary.com
Showing results for concurrence. Search instead for konkurrenzlinien.
Definitions

concurrence

[kuhn-kur-uhns, -kuhr-] / kənˈkɜr əns, -ˈkʌr- /
NOUN
occurring together
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Hall in 1994, an otherwise routine vote-dilution case, Justice Thomas took the opportunity to write a concurrence that dissected the Court’s Thornburg v.

From The Wall Street Journal • May 3, 2026

Her concurrence is too cryptic, though, to be of much use to lower courts trying to make sense of Gorsuch’s maximalist rhetoric.

From Slate • Mar. 31, 2026

And while it didn’t exactly fly off the shelves, its concurrence with the height of the Seattle grunge music scene made the disheveled aesthetic a street-style must-have.

From Salon • Mar. 27, 2026

If you actually think about it, what Justice Amy Coney Barrett said, what Justice Neil Gorsuch said, what Justice Elena Kagan said in her concurrence, and what the chief justice said?

From Slate • Mar. 4, 2026

In late-sixteenth-century French concurrence still means ‘coming together’ and not yet ‘competing’; in early-seventeenth-century Italian concorrente is only beginning to take on its modern meaning.

From "The Invention of Science" by David Wootton




Vocabulary lists containing concurrence