cohort

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Definizione monolingua


cohort


Noun

cohort (plural cohorts)


  1. A group of people supporting the same thing or person.
    • 1887 July, George John Romanes, Mental Differences of Men and Women, in Popular Science Monthly, Volume 31,
      Coyness and caprice have in consequence become a heritage of the sex, together with a cohort of allied weaknesses and petty deceits, that men have come to think venial, and even amiable, in women, but which they would not tolerate among themselves.
    • 1916, James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Chapter III,
      A sin, an instant of rebellious pride of the intellect, made Lucifer and a third part of the cohort of angels fall from their glory.
    • 1919, Albert Payson Terhune, Lad: A Dog, Chapter VI: Lost!,
      A lost dog??—?Yes. No succoring cohort surges to the relief. A gang of boys, perhaps, may give chase, but assuredly not in kindness.
  2. (statistics) A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group, or having a common characteristic.
    The 18-24 cohort shows a sharp increase in automobile fatalities over the proximate age groupings.
  3. (military, history) Any division of a Roman legion; normally of about 500 men.
    Three cohorts of men were assigned to the region.
    • 1900, Marcus Tullius Cicero, Evelyn Shuckburgh (translator), Letters to Atticus, 5.20,
      But he lost the whole of his first cohort and the centurion of the first line, a man of high rank in his own class, Asinius Dento, and the other centurions of the same cohort, as well as a military tribune, Sext. Lucilius, son of T. Gavius Caepio, a man of wealth, and high position.
    • 1910, Arthur Conan Doyle, The Last of the Legions,
      But here it is as clear as words can make it: Bring every man of the Legions by forced marches to the help of the Empire. Leave not a cohort in Britain. These are my orders.
    • 1913, Cornelius, article in Catholic Encyclopedia,
      The cohort in which he was centurion was probably the Cohors II Italica civium Romanorum, which a recently discovered inscription proves to have been stationed in Syria before A.D. 69.
  4. An accomplice; abettor; associate.
    He was able to plea down his sentence by revealing the names of three of his cohorts, as well as the source of the information.
  5. A colleague.

Definizione dizionario cohort


coorte
  division of Roman legion
  Any division of a Roman legion; normally of about 500 men.

Altri significati:
  (military, history) Any division of a Roman legion; normally of about 500 men.
  A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group.
  (statistics) A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group.
  demographic grouping of people
  group of people supporting the same thing or person
  A colleague.
  A group of people supporting the same thing or person.
  An accomplice; abettor; associate.

Traduzione cohort


coorte

Il nostro dizionario è liberamente ispirato al wikidizionario .... The online encyclopedia in which any reasonable person can join us in writing and editing entries on any encyclopedic topic



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