Concomitants
[kən'kɒmɪtənts]
Examples
- In my experience I had not met with truth, modesty, good principle as the concomitants of beauty. Charlotte Bronte. Shirley.
- Accident and disease, however, are the inseparable concomitants of human existence, and suffering and pain the ineffaceable legacies of mortality. Edward W. Byrn. The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century.
- The panic struck appeared of more injury, than disease and its natural concomitants. Mary Shelley. The Last Man.
- Its peculiar mischief lay not in the fighting, but in the concomitants of the fighting. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
Inputed by Conrad