The culture areas are essentially coincident with language areas. 文化区与语言区基本重合。
Hey! What a coincident! 哎呀,太精彩了。
This action is not coincident with our policy. 这种做法不符合我们的政策。
coincident
[ adj ]
occurring or operating at the same time
<adj.all> a series of coincident events
matching point for point
<adj.all> coincident circles
Coincident \Co*in"ci*dent\ (k[-o]*[i^]n"s[i^]*dent), a. [Cf. F. co["i]ncident.] Having coincidence; occupying the same place; contemporaneous; concurrent; -- followed by with.
Christianity teaches nothing but what is perfectly suitable to, and coincident with, the ruling principles of a virtuous and well-inclined man. --South.
Coincident \Co*in"ci*dent\, n. One of two or more coincident events; a coincidence. [R.] ``Coincidents and accidents.'' --Froude.
Fed officials may view the jobs report as a lagging or coincident indicator of economic strength and postpone a cut in interest rates until more data can be viewed, analysts believe.
However, a coincident index, which measures current economic activity, fell 0.2%, its first decline in five months.
The coincident index, which measures current economic activity, dropped 0.9% in September from August.
The department's index of coincident indicators, which is supposed to track the current pace of economic activity, dropped 1.1% in November after an identical tumble in October.
The Department's index of coincident indicators, which tend to rise and fall with economic activity, fell 0.2% to 166.7% of its 1967 average after decreasing 0.2% in March to 167%.
They are saved from court-martial and ruin only by the coincident decision in Washington to remove the target restriction.
The index rose from 30.8 per cent in December, partly because of a surge in machinery orders and lower commodity prices. However the EPA's index of coincident indicators, which shows current conditions, suggests the economy is still deeply depressed.