Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of coextensive Beyond this subset of works, the chipmunk paintings are also coextensive with the entire body and thrust of her production. Sarah Lehrer-Graiwer, Artforum, 1 Oct. 2024 The exotic animal was brought by ambassadors from the distant south, possibly from Nubia (a kingdom on the Nile roughly coextensive with modern Sudan). Peter Brown, The New York Review of Books, 24 Sep. 2020 Being online was not coextensive with being alive. Harper’s Magazine , 22 June 2022 The effect is like one of those montage reels that clutter up the Academy Awards broadcast — all the best bits of the last year run together to suggest that your personal memory of the past is exactly coextensive with Hollywood’s manufacture of fantasy. Washington Post, 27 Jan. 2022 How can its digital platforms become coextensive with its in-person programming, without losing the uniqueness of each? New York Times, 21 May 2021 The comparison with Lauren Bacall suggests a connection between kinds of beauty, or suggests, rather, that there’s always and only one beauty, which is coextensive with the life of God. Christian Wiman, Harper's magazine, 20 Jan. 2020 In a few decades the internet has swallowed the record, and become coextensive with it. Virginia Heffernan, WIRED, 20 Aug. 2019 These bonds always threaten to become chains for Baldwin, and lineage seems coextensive with numbing repetition. Ismail Muhammad, Slate Magazine, 15 Feb. 2017
Recent Examples of Synonyms for coextensive
Adjective
  • Before the switch to Motorola and the concurrent addition of fire station alerting software, telecommunicators would have to put callers on hold to dispatch emergency responders.
    Shelley Jones, Chicago Tribune, 3 Mar. 2025
  • The concurrent meetings of the two bodies are known as the Two Sessions.
    TIME, TIME, 3 Mar. 2025
Adjective
  • The timing of these changes were roughly coincident with clarification of Information Blocking rules and Epic’s introduction of its own competing product.
    Seth Joseph, Forbes, 26 Feb. 2024
  • Another suggestion is that there were two more or less coincident eruptions, one each in northern and southern hemispheres.
    Erik Klemetti, Discover Magazine, 26 July 2011
Adjective
  • With a lockable synchronic-tilt mechanism and special Z-Shape design, the Kaiser 2 can accommodate a weight up to 180kg, quite a bit more than normal mechanisms on office chairs and the back can be reclined to an angle of 160 degrees which can be locked when not in rocking mode.
    Mark Sparrow, Forbes, 11 Oct. 2021
  • For his last runway collection, unveiled in September, Michele constructed a parallel universe of side-by-side shows separated by a wall that when lifted revealed twins in identical looks in synchronic stride.
    Colleen Barry, Fortune, 24 Nov. 2022
Adjective
  • Time is rendered as a synchronous blend of moments, untethering and distorting any normative perspective.
    Sakhi Thirani, JSTOR Daily, 22 Mar. 2023
  • Well, considering the space telescope will be pretty much mapping everything in the sky from its special dawn-dusk sun synchronous orbit that keeps it cool enough to study infrared emissions — the list is endless.
    Monisha Ravisetti, Space.com, 31 Jan. 2025
Adjective
  • Of course, if a patient is found to have an underlying condition, the priority is treating the condition, which may address the cankers, too. Don’t forget nutrition.
    Matt Fuchs, TIME, 26 Feb. 2025
  • Copp has been one of the players to benefit most from the midseason coaching change, moving up the lineup and seeing his underlying numbers improve markedly since Todd McLellan took over.
    Max Bultman, The Athletic, 26 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • Purely coincidental, said Heat Executive Vice President and Chief Marking Officer Michael McCullough.
    Ira Winderman, Sun Sentinel, 16 Jan. 2025
  • The protagonist’s name and her obsession with anthropology likely aren’t coincidental.
    David Fear, Rolling Stone, 7 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • The nation’s period of domestic bliss was practically coterminous with the presidency of James Monroe, a Democratic-Republican whose landslide victory in 1816 accelerated the Federalist Party’s collapse.
    Eli Wizevich, Smithsonian Magazine, 1 Dec. 2024
  • From the moment of her father’s death and her subsequent coronation—receiving the Crown of St. Edward on her head, and bearing its almost five pounds of weight upright for the next three hours—the vast dimensions of her status as queen were coterminous with the diminutive dimensions of her person.
    Rebecca Mead, The New Yorker, 30 Sep. 2024

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Cite this Entry

“Coextensive.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/coextensive. Accessed 8 Mar. 2025.

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