英:[kənˌtempə'renɪəslɪ]
美:[kənˌtempə'renɪrslɪ]
英:[kənˌtempə'renɪəslɪ]
美:[kənˌtempə'renɪrslɪ]
adjective
existing, occurring, or originating during the same time
social and political events that were contemporaneous with each other
borrowed from Medieval Latin contemporāneus, from Latin con- con- + tempor-, tempus "time" + -āneus, compound suffix formed from -ānus -an >entry 2 + -eus -eous — more at -eous Note: The Latin word contemporāneus occurs as a noun in the sense "contemporary" in a chapter heading of Aulus Gellius's Noctes Atticae (19.14), though these headings are most likely a post-classical interpolation. The word is otherwise not attested before the early Middle Ages.
The first known use of contemporaneous was circa 1656
contra-prefix
against : contrary : contrasting
pitched below normal bass
contrabassoon
contradictoryadjective
involving, causing, or being a contradiction
contradictory statements
contiguousadjective
being in contact : adjoining
very near though not in contact
touching or connected in an unbroken series
the 48 contiguous states of the U.S.
contest1 of 2verb
to make (something) a cause of dispute or fighting
contest a claim
contest2 of 2noun
a struggle for victory : competition
contest1 of 2verb
to make (something) a cause of dispute or fighting
contest a claim
contest2 of 2noun
a struggle for victory : competition
contentiousadjective
inclined to argue
contentedadjective
satisfied with one's possessions or situation in life
contemptuousadjective
feeling or showing hate or deep disapproval
contemporaneousadjective
existing, occurring, or beginning during the same time
contemporaneousadjective
existing, occurring, or beginning during the same time
1 The president also expressed doubt at reports that McCabe, like his former boss, had maintained memos contemporaneously documenting his interactions with Trump.
2 In this view, Lucy’s ilk was an offshoot species that did not immediately replace its predecessor relatives but lived contemporaneously.
3 “It is troubling enough that the Clinton campaign funded Mr. Steele’s work, but that these Clinton associates were contemporaneously feeding Mr. Steele’s allegations raises additional concerns about his credibility,” said Mr. Grassley and Mr. Graham.
4 The confession was not a precise record taken down contemporaneously during the interview.
这份告白并非采访期间同期记录下来的一份一字不差的东西。
5 “It is troubling enough that the Clinton campaign funded Mr. Steele’s work, but that these Clintons associates were contemporaneously feeding Mr. Steele allegations raises additional concerns about his credibility.”
6 But, the government has since argued in court that both sets of notes were contemporaneously taken.
7 The writers contemporaneously acknowledge the value of having these conversations while lampooning the increasingly frequent tendency to police uncomfortable comedy.
8 That can be attributed, most likely, to the doubt — both contemporaneously and in hindsight — most had about the validity of Soviet justice.
9 His often shockingly obvious behavior deserves examination principally for the ghoulishly revealing light it sheds on what was contemporaneously happening to America’s financial system and government.
10 If he is unwilling to undertake this effort, he is saying effectively, “We support Ukraine, but only if it is contemporaneously cost-free.”
11 That in turn would lead to further delays and cost growth for the latter mission, potentially preventing it from operating contemporaneously with Webb—one of the original justifications for its existence.
12 Though Carroll’s account was vetted by New York—two friends confirmed that she told them the story contemporaneously with the event—it was a first-person account rather than an investigative report.
13 The bank also noted that travel and entertainment credit and debit card spending "saw some softening ... contemporaneously with the Omicron wave."
14 Like contemporaneous conflicts in Guatemala and El Salvador, the war between Sandinistas and Contras had wrecked the country’s economy and left its social fabric hanging by a thread.
15 He came of age in the 1960s, but his fledgling film-making career finally took off contemporaneously with punk’s emergence in New York and London between 1975 and 1977.
16 Jan Arnold, a New Zealand doctor and climber who was on Everest contemporaneously, vividly explains the physical toll that acclimating to the mountain can take.
17 the contemporaneous publication of the two articles
18 It is not to disparage his genius or his legacy to suggest that he did not pass those lessons on to those around him contemporaneously.
19 The divisions are now publicly surfacing as outright contradictions in official statements and well-informed leaks, sometimes made almost contemporaneously.
20 The contents of the documents, in which then-FBI Director James B. Comey contemporaneously kept track of his interactions with President Trump over the course of 2017, had already been mostly disclosed.