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Literary notes about Concomitantly (AI summary)

The term "concomitantly" is employed to signify that two or more phenomena occur at the same time or in association with one another. It is used in contexts where a parallel or simultaneous development is highlighted—whether referring to trends in public health, such as rising death-rates alongside declining birth-rates [1] and the reduction of certain diseases [2, 3, 4], or to abstract processes like the evolving dynamics between subject and object in philosophical discourse [5] and coordinated shifts in societal ideals [6]. Additionally, it underscores the idea that coexisting elements, be they biological processes growing together [7, 8] or interrelated activities within professional practice [9, 10], share a temporal connection that enriches the narrative without necessarily implying direct causality [11, 12, 13].
  1. But the death-rate has risen concomitantly (to over 24 per 1000), and has continued to rise notwithstanding the slight decline in the birth-rate.
    — from The Task of Social Hygiene by Havelock Ellis
  2. Yet the Medical Report for 1912 shows that, concomitantly with a fall in malaria, 1,010 fewer cases of dysentery were this year treated in hospital.
    — from The Forum, October 1914 by Various
  3. Concomitantly there may be a disturbance of menstruation.
    — from The Glands Regulating Personality A Study of the Glands of Internal Secretion in Relation to the Types of Human Nature by Louis Berman
  4. Concomitantly we have glandular enlargement, general malaise, and a high temperature.
    — from Bacteria Especially as they are related to the economy of nature, to industrial processes, and to the public health by Newman, George, Sir
  5. That which varies concomitantly with the variations in complexion of consciousness, is the dynamic relation between subject and object.
    — from Humanistic Studies of the University of Kansas, Vol. 1 by Pearl Hogrefe
  6. Concomitantly with these changes a different ideal of womanly personality is developing.
    — from Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 Sex in Relation to Society by Havelock Ellis
  7. In a carcass, for example, both processes may be going on concomitantly; so also in manure.
    — from Bacteria Especially as they are related to the economy of nature, to industrial processes, and to the public health by Newman, George, Sir
  8. Soon the food vacuole is formed and this grows concomitantly with the trophozoite and the parasite has a ring-like appearance.
    — from The Animal Parasites of Man by Fred. V. (Frederick Vincent) Theobald
  9. Concomitantly, the profession of nursing attends to the use of that knowledge in response to specific human needs.
    — from Nursing as Caring: A Model for Transforming Practice by Savina O'Bryan Schoenhofer
  10. Another group of nurse researchers chose to study the concept of care and caring concomitantly with nursing care practices.
    — from Nursing as Caring: A Model for Transforming Practice by Savina O'Bryan Schoenhofer
  11. Prominent personages debated it in public halls, only to be acclaimed and booed concomitantly.
    — from Gladiator by Philip Wylie
  12. We now turn to the other, and concomitantly active cause, in Mr. Podmore's theory, hallucination.
    — from The Making of Religion by Andrew Lang
  13. I answer that, Rectitude of will is necessary for Happiness both antecedently and concomitantly.
    — from Summa Theologica, Part I-II (Pars Prima Secundae)From the Complete American Edition by Thomas, Aquinas, Saint

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