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Subject: concomitant

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The Word of the Day for March 7 is:

concomitant \kun-KAH-muh-tunt\ adjective
: accompanying especially in a subordinate or incidental way

Example sentence:
Jane is terrified of flying, and she's also not fond of the concomitant
annoyances of air travel, like waiting in long security lines.

Did you know?
"Concomitant" was introduced into English at a time when many people were
criticizing the use of Latinate forms in favor of more "native" words from Old
English. As a descendant of Latin "concomitari" ("to accompany") and ultimately
of "comes," the Latin word for companion, "concomitant" may well have been
initially derided as an ostentatious inkhorn term. Indeed, two associated
words, the verb "concomitate," meaning "to accompany," and another adjective,
"concomitaneous," meaning "of a concomitant nature," didn't survive to
accompany "concomitant" into the 18th century.






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