Contemporaneous in a sentence as an adjective

"In cases where this can't be done or isn't practical the next best thing is being able to provide contemporaneous notes of conversations, dates and times with people you have spoken to.

Judges and juries tend to place more confidence in contemporaneous documents than they do in after-the-fact testimony.

[8] On average, the height of Neanderthals was comparable to contemporaneous **** sapiens.

"CC hotel / travel expenses to our standard address, put everything on the company card" is likely adequate, as long as there's a contemporaneous record of business travel.

Searching for 2009-vintage photos of the first family, of the performers, and even of the President himself became much, much harder on January 21st, as did finding contemporaneous news accounts of the first election.

For instance, if beer gave you confidence in social situations, consider attending a Toastmasters International session, which can help you with your contemporaneous speaking skills and boost your confidence.

We review events exhibiting evidence for elevated atmospheric CO2, global warming, and ocean acidification over the past ~300 million years of Earths history, some with contemporaneous extinction or evolutionary turnover among marine calcifiers.

As its internal contemporaneous documents and licensing practices reveal, Microsoft decided to bind Internet Explorer to Windows in order to prevent Navigator from weakening the applications barrier to entry, rather than for any pro-competitive purpose...Microsoft's executives believed that the incentives that its contractual restrictions placed on OEMs would not be sufficient in themselves to reverse the direction of Navigator's usage share.

Contemporaneous definitions

adjective

occurring in the same period of time; "a rise in interest rates is often contemporaneous with an increase in inflation"; "the composer Salieri was contemporary with Mozart"

See also: contemporary

adjective

of the same period

See also: coetaneous coeval