coeval
See also: coëval
English
Etymology
Late Latin coaevus, from Latin con- (“equal”) + aevum (“age”).
Adjective
coeval (not comparable)
- Of the same age; contemporary.
- Anything coeval with that clock will fetch a hefty price!
- The Baralaba Coal Measures are coeval with the Bandana Formation.
- 2009, Eric Buffetaut, Late Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Ecosystems in SE Asia:
- The differences between the Sao Khua dinosaur assemblage and the roughly coeval assemblages in China, notably those from the Jehol Group of NE China, have already been noted, and several hypotheses have been put forward, including differences in taphonomic conditions, and the existence of geographical or environmental barriers (Buffetaut et al. 2006; Fernandez et al. 2009).
Synonyms
Translations
of the same age
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Noun
coeval (plural coevals)
- Something of the same era.
- The telephone and television are coevals in that film.
- Somebody of the same age.
Translations
something of the same era
Quotations
- For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:coeval.
Anagrams
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