(v.) To inhabit or reside in company, or in the same place or country.
(v.) To dwell or live together as husband and wife.
Example Sentences:
(1) After 37 days of treatment with (-)-gossypol, only 2 out of 5 males were fertile, and a further loss of fertility was apparent during the next cohabitation period.
(2) And if you think simply living together rather than marrying will help to keep you healthy, it is worth bearing in mind that research has found that cohabiting couples who separate are likely to be similarly affected .
(3) After controlling for the effects of active and passive exposure to cigarette smoke, problems with the home heating system (odds ratio 9.6; p less than 0.03) and the presence of cohabitants with concurrent headache or dizziness (odds ratio 21.6; p less than 0.0001) were associated with an increased risk of a carboxyhemoglobin greater than 10 percent.
(4) The probability that the initial situation is correct--the proband and the cohabitant's six children are all legitimate-is "practically refuted": W = 0.03%.
(5) In 2 of the other 4 operated patients cohabitation was possible again only with auto-injections of papaverine.
(6) And yet, by spotlighting how very far the brand has travelled under Sarah Burton in the post-Lee years, the Savage Beauty announcement, coming hot on the heels of the Antipodean tour, also flags up the contrasting identities that cohabit the McQueen brand.
(7) Prior hormonal, copulatory, or cohabitation experience did not significantly influence sexual responses between females and unfamiliar male partners.
(8) To determine the risk of cohabitant HCV infection, we investigated the sera of 101 family members of 53 anti-HCV antibody positive chronic liver disease patients.
(9) Extra treatment attention may therefore be justified for non-cohabiting males.
(10) Cohabitation carried a higher risk, most pronounced in the low income group.
(11) Factor analysis grouped the variables considered into 5 factors: the first was associated with veterinary assistance; the second with the animal's function and the presence of whipworms, hookworms and tapeworms; the third with cohabitation, origin and presence of coccidia; the fourth with the presence of fresh meat (cooked, raw or frozen) in the diet, age and positivity for ascarids; the fifth with sex and the presence of gastroenteric conditions.
(12) Cohabitation with a female without mating also did not influence the behavior of wild males toward young.
(13) The intermale social aggressive behavior of male rats cohabiting with a female rat was quantitatively scored weekly in response to the introduction of an unfamiliar intruding male.
(14) The interactive effects of hormones, sexual history and cohabitation on sexual and social behaviors were examined in pairs of ovariectomized female and sexually experienced male prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster).
(15) The family situation (e.g., cohabitation or not) had some effect, although it was not statistically significant.
(16) Sons were more likely to drink heavily if fathers drank heavily and mothers who drank heavily were more likely to cohabit with heavy drinkers.
(17) In any case, far from being strange bedfellows, criminality and politics have always cohabited quite happily.
(18) The average number of sexual partners and frequency of cohabitations had been higher with women in whom UI was to develop later on.
(19) Compared to male subjects, females are more likely to be married or cohabiting, of higher social-economic status, born in places in the Far East apart from Mainland China, and of lower educational level.
(20) After 1988, when youth counseling began, counseling sessions were added as part of cohabitation education.
Coition
Definition:
(n.) A coming together; sexual intercourse; copulation.
Example Sentences:
(1) The spermatozoa were from three experiments: 1) incubation in Hepes buffer, 2) natural coition, and 3) insemination.
(2) Canine chastity belt In 1903, German Baroness Margarethe Johanne Christianne Marie von Heyden and her husband, anxious to maintain the purity of the pedigree of their dogs, designed a device to prevent "coition in the case of bitches and other female animals more particularly for the purpose of preventing cross-breeding".
(3) Theoretically, in female circumcision the genital scaring and dyspareunia may lead to genital ulceration and anal coition, which are co-factors in HIV transmission.
(4) Homologous matings showed that the two lines behaved differently before and during coition and that a mixture of the two behaviour patterns occurred in heterologous crossings.
(5) Different preparations of Ruta graveolens were administered orally to female rats (Days 1-10 post coition) and female hamsters (Days 1-6 post coition).