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Definitions

synchronism

[sing-kruh-niz-uhm] / ˈsɪŋ krəˌnɪz əm /


NOUN
concurrence
Synonyms


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Far from spurring people to abandon her old-fashioned methods and embrace electronic synchronism, the correspondence brought her services to the attention of many who had not previously subscribed.

From BBC • May 27, 2024

For success, as has already been said, one thing was essential, and that thing very difficult to obtain—a perfect synchronism between one stylus and the other.

From Marvels of Scientific Invention An Interesting Account in Non-technical Language of the Invention of Guns, Torpedoes, Submarine Mines, Up-to-date Smelting, Freezing, Colour Photography, and many other recent Discoveries of Science by Corbin, Thomas W.

Chateaubriand’s first happy synchronism with the course of events was his publishing the “Genius of Christianity” when he did.

From French Classics by Wilkinson, William Cleaver

The political and the literary history of France join a sort of synchronism with one another at a certain point of time, which makes this arrangement not only feasible but natural.

From French Classics by Wilkinson, William Cleaver

Brooks ends his paper with a brief résumé of glacial changes in North America, but as the means of dating events are unreliable the degree of synchronism with Europe is not clear.

From Climatic Changes Their Nature and Causes by Huntington, Ellsworth