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  1. Dictionary
    concurrently
    /kənˈkʌrəntli/

    adverb

    • 1. at the same time; simultaneously: "journal articles published concurrently with the exhibition"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 19. I just looked these up in an online dictionary; this is what I found: concurrently: overlapping in duration. simultaneously: at the same instant. Both of them mean "at the same time," and are almost interchangeable. That said, if I had to point out a slight difference, I'd say that concurrently occurs over a longer time, and is a bit less ...

  3. So "contemporaneous" refers to things that happened in, or are associated with, the same period of time, whereas "simultaneous" refers to things that happened at the same moment. To put it another way, contemporaneous things were happening at the same time, while simultaneous things happened at the same time. Share. Improve this answer.

  4. Jan 18, 2015 · Occurring or existing concurrently; attendant: poverty and its concomitant social problems. See Synonyms at contemporary. It can sometimes be useful to search dictionaries for the term and notice the types of sentences used as examples. However, dictionaries often don't serve this purpose well (as the example in your question suggests).

  5. But you can't use it the same way as concurrently, because it is meaningless to do something "sequentially with" another thing. "in sequence with" works, but doesn't mean precisely the opposite. Part of the difficulty is that "in sequence" really wants to carry information about which thing happens first.

  6. Overall, yes consecutively and successively are equivalent. On closer examination, there is a slight difference though. In consecutively, there is no gap. In successively there is just some order. For instance " in close/short succession " is sometimes preferred to " in succession " to emphasize consecutiveness. For instance: 1, 2 and 4 are ...

  7. I have to say first that consequentially is a pretty rare word. My advice would be to steer well clear of it, because nearly every time you use it, people will assume you're making a mistake and that you should have used consequently. In principle consequentially does overlap in meaning with consequently, in that they can both mean as a result ...

  8. Jan 29, 2012 · 9. While Answer 1 is the correct choice when the word "convenient' is related to location, using the word to doesn't apply as absolutely when the meeting's time is under negotiation. To illustrate: It works to say "convenient to you," when you're suggesting that a location can be reached with little effort, like "near to you" or "next to you ...

  9. 11. What is the difference between these two words? contemporary: From the same time period, coexistent in time. contemporaneous: Existing or created in the same period of time. I know that contemporary has a second meaning (modern), but I'm asking about the above sense. Can they be used interchangeably? differences. adjectives.

  10. Mar 9, 2017 · Note that there are two senses which 'consequently' can carry: << Adv. 1. consequently - (sentence connectors) because of the reason given [in the previous sentence etc]; "consequently, he didn't do it"; "continued to have severe headaches and accordingly returned to the doctor" accordingly // 2. consequently - as a consequence; "he had good reason to be grateful for the opportunities which they had made available to him and which consequently led to the good position he now held" therefore ...

  11. The other is "A and B are administered concurrently." (It's very surprising you don't know this if in the industry! You're going to kill patients.) If you are trying to express both of these facts... Fact 1: "A and B are administered sequentially" Fact 2: "A before B."... in the same sentence. In my opinion you can not do that properly. "B must ...