We have no meanings for "fortuitous concurrence" in our records yet.
1 It was a fortuitous concurrence of garments, arising I know not how.
2 To what a fortuitous concurrence do we not owe every pleasure and convenience of our lives.
3 A group of mankind thus formed is something quite different from a fortuitous concurrence of atoms.
4 They were more, as Palmerston described his coalition with Disraeli, an "accidental and fortuitous concurrence of atoms".
5 There is no power, no deity, no chance, no ' fortuitous concurrence of atoms' in what is simply a figure of the Universal Mathematics.
6 The utter materialist may say that life to him is a fortuitous concurrence of atoms, a chance kinking in the universal fabric of matter.
7 Men are as much indebted to a fortuitous concurrence of circumstances, for the characters they sustain in this world, as to their personal qualities.
8 Let us not, however, be told, that pursuing this hypothesis, we attribute every thing to a blind cause-tothe fortuitous concurrence of atoms-tochance.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: