Share living quarters; usually said of people who are not married and live together as a couple.
1 There may be several people within earshot who also cohabit with their mothers.
2 Can these new civic values cohabit with customary Catholic thought?
3 Is there a sort of Ware-verse in which they cohabit ?
4 She reflected, 'How does he, after having produced me from himself, cohabit with me?
5 And they have a less formal attitude to marriage, with many couples choosing to cohabit .
6 Let's accept, with goodwill, that those two can cohabit .
7 This would release them from their obligation to cohabit .
8 It is the same whether a man eat, or drink, or cohabit , or sleep sensually.
9 Does she welcome the intruder and discuss how best they can cohabit the territory, sharing prey?
10 De Waal considers apes not because they are our cousins, but because they cohabit our planet.
11 Concerning those who minister at the altar and have wives, whether they may cohabit with them.
12 The three elements here could be made independently, but they do cohabit a plate rather nicely.
13 Dr. Cave imagines, that St. Gregory continued to cohabit with his wife after he was bishop.
14 Power and money cohabit the same space.
15 Artist, lover of life, insistent truth-teller, Calvinist, Bohemian, believer in joy, all these cohabit in his hooks.
16 Now she can cohabit in peace with his memory, rather than being persecuted by his morbid clutter.
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About this term cohabit
Verb
Indicative · Present