This civilization coincides wonderfully with that of the primitive Aryans as shown by linguistic palaeontology.
It may also be called the recent or post-glacial period, for it coincides with the final disappearance of the last great glaciation, and the establishment of conditions of climate resembling those of the present day.
The change in manner coincides exactly with the Edinburgh visit.
His notion of the poetic function is ambitious, and coincides roughly with what Schopenhauer has laid down as the province of the metaphysician.
B, six spindles or skewers, numbered, from 1 to 6, placed in a vertical position upon the circumference of a circle, whose centre coincides with that of the machine at the point C.
But as the direction of the impression generating emotion coincides with that of the motor impulses, the latter would not be counteracted, but reinforced.
In a simple age it coincides with the distinction of the sexes.
This theory will be advanced, I think, not when an ordinary dream is recalled by a waking experience, but only when the dream coincides with and foreruns that experience, which is a thing that dreams have no business to do.
The administrative district of Braga coincides with the central part of the province of Entre Minho e Douro (q.
The administrative district of Braganza coincides with the eastern part of Traz-os-Montes (q.
In France, as in England and America, the habitual devotion of spinsters has long since been observed, though it often coincides with a certain pining away of the heart.
The ancient republics were comparatively non-religious for their time; the disappearance of monarchy coincides in general, in the history of mankind, with enfeeblement of faith.
An examination of the statistics bearing on this question coincides with this general statement; but Fox's tables, already quoted, would show that more infants under one year of age die of measles than has hitherto been supposed.
He points out that their first appearance coincides with the commencement of the disease, that they increase with it, and that they disappear with its decline.
This coincides with our experience also, for we have frequently tested the urine in seven cases with negative results.
This term, however, is now more commonly applied to a fellow-feeling with others under affliction, and thencoincides very nearly with commiseration.
And that change of appellation coincides with the fact that so many of the allusions which we have to him represent him as sending messages of Christian greeting across the sea to his Gentile brethren.
And it further coincides with the fact that his gospel is obviously intended for the use of Gentile Christians, and, according to an old and reliable tradition, was written in Rome for Roman Christians.
Since rape frequently coincides with seduction, the one is sometimes used to signify the other.
By pantostatic or indifferently stable ground-forms are meant those in which the centre of gravity coincides with the centre of the body, so that they are in equilibrium in any given position.
The podoconus is primitively a vertical regular cone whose circular base occupies the horizontal porochora or "basal porous area" of the central capsule, while its vertical axis coincides with that of the latter.
Siphonosphaera, were very well preserved in some preparations in the Challenger collection; perhaps their development coincides with the formation of spores, and may be regarded as an encystation.
But the real time of sunset must be computed when the sun has descended about 50' below the horizon, at which point the sun's upper limb coincides with the line, H O, of the horizon.
The curve for the first degree (A) coincides of course with the isoseismal line of intensity 2.
It lies, moreover, close to Ventas de Zafarraya and Arenas del Rey, the two places where the seismic death-rate was highest, while its major axis almost coincides with the line joining them.
This area is about 9 miles long and 2-1/2 miles wide, its longer axis runs nearly east and west, and its centre coincides with the western focus of the ellipse which forms the boundary of the meizoseismal area.
The most important fault-scarp is that called by Mr. Oldham the Chedrang fault, after the stream which coincides roughly with a great part of its course.
The boundary of the disturbed area, which coincides nearly with that of the fifth shock (E, Fig.
It has a very wide range, which nearly coincides with that of the cod, although of a somewhat more southern character, as it extends to both east and west coasts of the North Atlantic, and is occasionally found in the Mediterranean.
However, for a short distance near the bottom, the circle so nearly coincides with the cycloid that a pendulum swinging in the usual circular path is, for small arcs, isochronous for practical purposes.
The area in which they occur coincides with that in which other traces of the Pueblo tribes have been found.
Bounded by the rivers Drin and Timoc, the present principality coincides nearly, though not quite, with the Roman Province of Moesia Superior.
Their area coincides nearly with that of New Russia; nearly also with the Steppe district, as opposed to the fat black soils of the Middle Dneiper, if we consider it in respect to its physical geography.
With that part, however, of Albania which coincides with the ancient Epirus, rather than with Southern Illyria the case is different.
When that point coincides with the intersection of the two central spider lines the telescope is properly sighted.
From a diligent study of the records of magnetic observations it has been found that the time of sun-spot maximum always coincides almost exactly with that of maximum daily oscillation of the compass needle, while the minima agree similarly.
A star which happened to lie on the ecliptic will not be at all deranged by aberration from its mean place when it happens that the apex coincides with the star.
We can even calculate the degree of ellipticity which this surmise would require, and we find that it coincides with the observed ellipticity.
At the polar circle, as mentioned above, it coincides with the Tropic of Cancer, and at the North Pole with the Equator.
Sidenote: Southern Finns in Scandinavia] This is doubtless a linguistic division, but to a certain extent it coincides with anthropological distinctions.
The appearance of "Strafford" coincides so closely with at least the conception of "Sordello" as to afford a strong proof of the variety of the author's genius.
The birth of his Sordello, as probably of the real one, coincides with the close of the twelfth century; and with an active condition of the family feuds which were just merging in the conflict of Guelphs and Ghibellines.
This colouring coincides in its general form with the feeling of agreeableness that arises at the end and with the feeling of relaxation following the strain of expectation.
Therefore we emphasise an impression that coincides with a rise in the apperception wave, so that the beats which are in fact uniform become rhythmically arranged.
Nature, cause coincides with it in intelligible, vi.
Intelligible in it, cause coincideswith nature, vi.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coincides" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.