Concomitant in a sentence as a noun

All while being practical—it has to be, since it's evolved with a Servo as a concomitant project.

I'm confident that's coming against the domestic population, with concomitant "oops, we didn't mean to hit the playground" events.

Are they charging Wikileaks for Assange's personal sexual assault and concomitant extradition fight?

But the proliferation of cell phones, and their concomitant ability to record and distribute data is making it possible for individuals and small groups to do things like this rain forest project.

These are patent holders who do not use their patents to produce things but rather use them solely for licensing and the concomitant litigation that inevitably follows against those who decline the licensing "offer.

If the idea that you couldn't rely on someone's word seeped into the startup culture, people would start getting a lot more insistent on i-dotting and t-crossing, and pretty much no one would benefit from the concomitant rise in hostility.

I have no idea about Xerox's corporate history, but the evisceration of engineering departments in US giants and the concomitant decline in what one might call 'standards' or 'rigor' is an established concept.

Concomitant in a sentence as an adjective

It is therefore absolutely guaranteed that a concomitant amount of government operations and agenda, related to this surveillance, will become secret and unaccountable.

Those who value copyright and its social benefits in protecting creative output also value the public domain because it is a natural concomitant to the protected core of works that fall under copyright in any given generation.

"he carried into adulthood the concomitant problems in relating to others—and very pertinently to women—ensuring the prerequisite internal pool of frustrations essential for lateral thinking"I don't think this follows at all, honestly.

There are a great many wonderful things about the present moment, chief among them the enormously expanded access to creative computational tools and its concomitant, the wonderful increase in the geographical/cultural spread of creative work with technology.

>We also conclude that imposing a requirement that officers have reasonable suspicion in order to conduct a border search of an electronic device would be operationally harmful without concomitant civil rights/civil liberties benefits,Well frankly, in that case, I don't give a **** what you conclude, because you're mentally incompetent.

I think it's due to a combination of various pathological factors: the popular dogma that the responsibility to shareholders is to maximize profit to the greatest degree in the shortest possible time; the concomitant public company quarterly earnings treadmill and conflation of stock price with marketplace success; misaligned interests and perverse incentives among management and worker tiers; the "austerity yields prosperity" meme; lack of compensation-driven stakeholder mentality in top management; and the oversimplification fallacy that, especially with large entities, no matter how many pieces comprise the whole, one more can always be removed.

Concomitant definitions

noun

an event or situation that happens at the same time as or in connection with another

See also: accompaniment attendant co-occurrence

adjective

following or accompanying as a consequence; "an excessive growth of bureaucracy, with attendant problems"; "snags incidental to the changeover in management"; "attendant circumstances"; "the period of tension and consequent need for military preparedness"; "the ensuant response to his appeal"; "the resultant savings were considerable"

See also: attendant consequent accompanying incidental ensuant resultant sequent