Shobdo Logo
MWoccasion

occasion

Flag: gbEnglishMerriam-Webster Dictionary

pan> of low quality //coarse imitations of quality merchandise
cock​le
noun (1)
cock·​le
ˈkä-kəl

Definition (Entry 1 of 3)

  • any of several weedy plants of the pink family
    especially corn cockle
noun (2)

Definition (Entry 2 of 3)

  • any of various chiefly marine bivalve mollusks (family Cardiidae) having a shell with convex radially ribbed valves
    especially a common edible European bivalve (Cerastoderma edule synonym Cardium edule)
noun (3)

Definition (Entry 3 of 3)

Other Words
Noun (3)
  • cockle verb
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Noun (2)
14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Noun (3)
15th century, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English coccel
Noun (2)
Middle English cokle, cokkel, cokille "the mollusk Cerastoderma edule, its shell," borrowed from Anglo-French coquile, cokile "eggshell, shell of the cockle or scallop" (continental Old & Middle French coquille), going back to Vulgar Latin *cocīlia or *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg," alteration of Latin conchȳlia, plural (taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular) of conchȳlium "mollusk, shellfish," borrowed from Greek konchýlion "seashell," double diminutive of kónchē "clam, mussel, conch"

NOTE: The etymon with a long front vowel (*co(n)cīlia) is evident in French coquille, Old Occitan cauquilha and a variety of Gallo-Romance dialect forms (see Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, vol. 2, pp. 1002-06), as well as a scattering of Romance forms elsewhere, as Neapolitan skontšiłə "the sea snail Hexaplex trunculus" (see scungilli), Corsican kuntšíłulu "kind of snail," regional Portuguese (Algarve) conquilho "mussel." The form with short u (*cocŭlia) is attested as cagouille "snail, escargot" in western dialects of French (Aunis, Saintonge, Poitou) and cocoille in central dialects (Touraine, Berry); it is also recorded in adjacent dialects of Occitan (Old Occitan cogolha "snail," Dordogne cagoulho). There are again scattered forms in Italo-Romance: kaguya, kuguya "snail" (Rovinj/Rovigno, Istrian Peninsula), concule "kind of mollusk" (Marche), koɳguyə (Abruzzi). Nearly all forms show loss of the nasal consonant and the failure of the front vowel variants to palatalize the velar consonant. Both of these changes have been ascribed to blending with another word, perhaps Latin coccum "the scale insect Kermes ilicis (thought to be a berry or excrescence on the plant)" or *cuscolium with the same sense. The result was a vowel sequence o - o, sometimes dissimilating to a - o. Another conjectural variant attested in eastern Occitan has an added stressed syllable: kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers)—see etymology and note at escargot. — Oxford Latin Dictionary has conchȳlium with long ȳ, which fits the Romance outcome, though length is not indicated for the Greek word in Liddell and Scott or the Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

Noun (3)
Middle English kokell, ultimately from Middle French coquillé wavy or rounded like a shell, from coquille
cod​ger
noun
cod·​ger
ˈkä-jər

Definition

  • an often mildly eccentric and usually elderly fellow //old codger
Examples
  • //Her father is a feisty old codger.
  • //just an old codger who never harmed anyone
First Known Use
circa 1738, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
probably alteration of cadger
codger
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​in​ci​dence
noun
co·​in·​ci·​dence
kō-ˈin(t)-sə-dən(t)s -sə-ˌden(t)s

Definition

  • the act or condition of coinciding correspondence //… a perfect coincidence between truth and goodness … — Robert South
  • the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection //… causal connection requires something more than mere coincidence as to time and place … — Wayne R. LaFave
    also any of these occurrences
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
coexistence concurrence concurrency
Examples
  • //It was mere coincidence that brought them together so far from Chicago.
  • //By coincidence, every man in the room was named Fred.
  • //“I'm going to Boston this weekend.” “What a coincidence! I am too.”
  • //It was no coincidence that he quit his job at the bank a day after the robbery.
  • //a series of strange coincidences
  • //By a fortunate coincidence, we arrived at the theater at the same time.
  • //Scientists have no explanation for the coincidence of these phenomena.
First Known Use
1605, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin coincidentia, derivative of coincident-, coincidens, present participle of coincidere "to agree in nature, coincide"
coincidence
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​logne
noun
co·​logne
kə-ˈlōn

Definition

  • a perfumed liquid composed of alcohol and fragrant oils
  • a cream or paste of cologne sometimes formed into a semisolid stick
Other Words
  • co​logned kə-ˈlōnd adjective
cock​le
noun (1)
cock·​le
ˈkä-kəl

Definition (Entry 1 of 3)

  • any of several weedy plants of the pink family
    especially corn cockle
noun (2)

Definition (Entry 2 of 3)

  • any of various chiefly marine bivalve mollusks (family Cardiidae) having a shell with convex radially ribbed valves
    especially a common edible European bivalve (Cerastoderma edule synonym Cardium edule)
noun (3)

Definition (Entry 3 of 3)

Other Words
Noun (3)
  • cockle verb
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Noun (2)
14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Noun (3)
15th century, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English coccel
Noun (2)
Middle English cokle, cokkel, cokille "the mollusk Cerastoderma edule, its shell," borrowed from Anglo-French coquile, cokile "eggshell, shell of the cockle or scallop" (continental Old & Middle French coquille), going back to Vulgar Latin *cocīlia or *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg," alteration of Latin conchȳlia, plural (taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular) of conchȳlium "mollusk, shellfish," borrowed from Greek konchýlion "seashell," double diminutive of kónchē "clam, mussel, conch"

NOTE: The etymon with a long front vowel (*co(n)cīlia) is evident in French coquille, Old Occitan cauquilha and a variety of Gallo-Romance dialect forms (see Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, vol. 2, pp. 1002-06), as well as a scattering of Romance forms elsewhere, as Neapolitan skontšiłə "the sea snail Hexaplex trunculus" (see scungilli), Corsican kuntšíłulu "kind of snail," regional Portuguese (Algarve) conquilho "mussel." The form with short u (*cocŭlia) is attested as cagouille "snail, escargot" in western dialects of French (Aunis, Saintonge, Poitou) and cocoille in central dialects (Touraine, Berry); it is also recorded in adjacent dialects of Occitan (Old Occitan cogolha "snail," Dordogne cagoulho). There are again scattered forms in Italo-Romance: kaguya, kuguya "snail" (Rovinj/Rovigno, Istrian Peninsula), concule "kind of mollusk" (Marche), koɳguyə (Abruzzi). Nearly all forms show loss of the nasal consonant and the failure of the front vowel variants to palatalize the velar consonant. Both of these changes have been ascribed to blending with another word, perhaps Latin coccum "the scale insect Kermes ilicis (thought to be a berry or excrescence on the plant)" or *cuscolium with the same sense. The result was a vowel sequence o - o, sometimes dissimilating to a - o. Another conjectural variant attested in eastern Occitan has an added stressed syllable: kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers)—see etymology and note at escargot. — Oxford Latin Dictionary has conchȳlium with long ȳ, which fits the Romance outcome, though length is not indicated for the Greek word in Liddell and Scott or the Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

Noun (3)
Middle English kokell, ultimately from Middle French coquillé wavy or rounded like a shell, from coquille
cod​ger
noun
cod·​ger
ˈkä-jər

Definition

  • an often mildly eccentric and usually elderly fellow //old codger
Examples
  • //Her father is a feisty old codger.
  • //just an old codger who never harmed anyone
First Known Use
circa 1738, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
probably alteration of cadger
codger
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​in​ci​dence
noun
co·​in·​ci·​dence
kō-ˈin(t)-sə-dən(t)s -sə-ˌden(t)s

Definition

  • the act or condition of coinciding correspondence //… a perfect coincidence between truth and goodness … — Robert South
  • the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection //… causal connection requires something more than mere coincidence as to time and place … — Wayne R. LaFave
    also any of these occurrences
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
coexistence concurrence concurrency
Examples
  • //It was mere coincidence that brought them together so far from Chicago.
  • //By coincidence, every man in the room was named Fred.
  • //“I'm going to Boston this weekend.” “What a coincidence! I am too.”
  • //It was no coincidence that he quit his job at the bank a day after the robbery.
  • //a series of strange coincidences
  • //By a fortunate coincidence, we arrived at the theater at the same time.
  • //Scientists have no explanation for the coincidence of these phenomena.
First Known Use
1605, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin coincidentia, derivative of coincident-, coincidens, present participle of coincidere "to agree in nature, coincide"
coincidence
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​logne
noun
co·​logne
kə-ˈlōn

Definition

  • a perfumed liquid composed of alcohol and fragrant oils
  • a cream or paste of cologne sometimes formed into a semisolid stick
Other Words
  • co​logned kə-ˈlōnd adjective
cock​le
noun (1)
cock·​le
ˈkä-kəl

Definition (Entry 1 of 3)

  • any of several weedy plants of the pink family
    especially corn cockle
noun (2)

Definition (Entry 2 of 3)

  • any of various chiefly marine bivalve mollusks (family Cardiidae) having a shell with convex radially ribbed valves
    especially a common edible European bivalve (Cerastoderma edule synonym Cardium edule)
noun (3)

Definition (Entry 3 of 3)

Other Words
Noun (3)
  • cockle verb
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Noun (2)
14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Noun (3)
15th century, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English coccel
Noun (2)
Middle English cokle, cokkel, cokille "the mollusk Cerastoderma edule, its shell," borrowed from Anglo-French coquile, cokile "eggshell, shell of the cockle or scallop" (continental Old & Middle French coquille), going back to Vulgar Latin *cocīlia or *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg," alteration of Latin conchȳlia, plural (taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular) of conchȳlium "mollusk, shellfish," borrowed from Greek konchýlion "seashell," double diminutive of kónchē "clam, mussel, conch"

NOTE: The etymon with a long front vowel (*co(n)cīlia) is evident in French coquille, Old Occitan cauquilha and a variety of Gallo-Romance dialect forms (see Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, vol. 2, pp. 1002-06), as well as a scattering of Romance forms elsewhere, as Neapolitan skontšiłə "the sea snail Hexaplex trunculus" (see scungilli), Corsican kuntšíłulu "kind of snail," regional Portuguese (Algarve) conquilho "mussel." The form with short u (*cocŭlia) is attested as cagouille "snail, escargot" in western dialects of French (Aunis, Saintonge, Poitou) and cocoille in central dialects (Touraine, Berry); it is also recorded in adjacent dialects of Occitan (Old Occitan cogolha "snail," Dordogne cagoulho). There are again scattered forms in Italo-Romance: kaguya, kuguya "snail" (Rovinj/Rovigno, Istrian Peninsula), concule "kind of mollusk" (Marche), koɳguyə (Abruzzi). Nearly all forms show loss of the nasal consonant and the failure of the front vowel variants to palatalize the velar consonant. Both of these changes have been ascribed to blending with another word, perhaps Latin coccum "the scale insect Kermes ilicis (thought to be a berry or excrescence on the plant)" or *cuscolium with the same sense. The result was a vowel sequence o - o, sometimes dissimilating to a - o. Another conjectural variant attested in eastern Occitan has an added stressed syllable: kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers)—see etymology and note at escargot. — Oxford Latin Dictionary has conchȳlium with long ȳ, which fits the Romance outcome, though length is not indicated for the Greek word in Liddell and Scott or the Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

Noun (3)
Middle English kokell, ultimately from Middle French coquillé wavy or rounded like a shell, from coquille
cod​ger
noun
cod·​ger
ˈkä-jər

Definition

  • an often mildly eccentric and usually elderly fellow //old codger
Examples
  • //Her father is a feisty old codger.
  • //just an old codger who never harmed anyone
First Known Use
circa 1738, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
probably alteration of cadger
codger
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​in​ci​dence
noun
co·​in·​ci·​dence
kō-ˈin(t)-sə-dən(t)s -sə-ˌden(t)s

Definition

  • the act or condition of coinciding correspondence //… a perfect coincidence between truth and goodness … — Robert South
  • the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection //… causal connection requires something more than mere coincidence as to time and place … — Wayne R. LaFave
    also any of these occurrences
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
coexistence concurrence concurrency
Examples
  • //It was mere coincidence that brought them together so far from Chicago.
  • //By coincidence, every man in the room was named Fred.
  • //“I'm going to Boston this weekend.” “What a coincidence! I am too.”
  • //It was no coincidence that he quit his job at the bank a day after the robbery.
  • //a series of strange coincidences
  • //By a fortunate coincidence, we arrived at the theater at the same time.
  • //Scientists have no explanation for the coincidence of these phenomena.
First Known Use
1605, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin coincidentia, derivative of coincident-, coincidens, present participle of coincidere "to agree in nature, coincide"
coincidence
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​logne
noun
co·​logne
kə-ˈlōn

Definition

  • a perfumed liquid composed of alcohol and fragrant oils
  • a cream or paste of cologne sometimes formed into a semisolid stick
Other Words
  • co​logned kə-ˈlōnd adjective
cock​le
noun (1)
cock·​le
ˈkä-kəl

Definition (Entry 1 of 3)

  • any of several weedy plants of the pink family
    especially corn cockle
noun (2)

Definition (Entry 2 of 3)

  • any of various chiefly marine bivalve mollusks (family Cardiidae) having a shell with convex radially ribbed valves
    especially a common edible European bivalve (Cerastoderma edule synonym Cardium edule)
noun (3)

Definition (Entry 3 of 3)

Other Words
Noun (3)
  • cockle verb
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Noun (2)
14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Noun (3)
15th century, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English coccel
Noun (2)
Middle English cokle, cokkel, cokille "the mollusk Cerastoderma edule, its shell," borrowed from Anglo-French coquile, cokile "eggshell, shell of the cockle or scallop" (continental Old & Middle French coquille), going back to Vulgar Latin *cocīlia or *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg," alteration of Latin conchȳlia, plural (taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular) of conchȳlium "mollusk, shellfish," borrowed from Greek konchýlion "seashell," double diminutive of kónchē "clam, mussel, conch"

NOTE: The etymon with a long front vowel (*co(n)cīlia) is evident in French coquille, Old Occitan cauquilha and a variety of Gallo-Romance dialect forms (see Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, vol. 2, pp. 1002-06), as well as a scattering of Romance forms elsewhere, as Neapolitan skontšiłə "the sea snail Hexaplex trunculus" (see scungilli), Corsican kuntšíłulu "kind of snail," regional Portuguese (Algarve) conquilho "mussel." The form with short u (*cocŭlia) is attested as cagouille "snail, escargot" in western dialects of French (Aunis, Saintonge, Poitou) and cocoille in central dialects (Touraine, Berry); it is also recorded in adjacent dialects of Occitan (Old Occitan cogolha "snail," Dordogne cagoulho). There are again scattered forms in Italo-Romance: kaguya, kuguya "snail" (Rovinj/Rovigno, Istrian Peninsula), concule "kind of mollusk" (Marche), koɳguyə (Abruzzi). Nearly all forms show loss of the nasal consonant and the failure of the front vowel variants to palatalize the velar consonant. Both of these changes have been ascribed to blending with another word, perhaps Latin coccum "the scale insect Kermes ilicis (thought to be a berry or excrescence on the plant)" or *cuscolium with the same sense. The result was a vowel sequence o - o, sometimes dissimilating to a - o. Another conjectural variant attested in eastern Occitan has an added stressed syllable: kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers)—see etymology and note at escargot. — Oxford Latin Dictionary has conchȳlium with long ȳ, which fits the Romance outcome, though length is not indicated for the Greek word in Liddell and Scott or the Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

Noun (3)
Middle English kokell, ultimately from Middle French coquillé wavy or rounded like a shell, from coquille
cod​ger
noun
cod·​ger
ˈkä-jər

Definition

  • an often mildly eccentric and usually elderly fellow //old codger
Examples
  • //Her father is a feisty old codger.
  • //just an old codger who never harmed anyone
First Known Use
circa 1738, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
probably alteration of cadger
codger
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​in​ci​dence
noun
co·​in·​ci·​dence
kō-ˈin(t)-sə-dən(t)s -sə-ˌden(t)s

Definition

  • the act or condition of coinciding correspondence //… a perfect coincidence between truth and goodness … — Robert South
  • the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection //… causal connection requires something more than mere coincidence as to time and place … — Wayne R. LaFave
    also any of these occurrences
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
coexistence concurrence concurrency
Examples
  • //It was mere coincidence that brought them together so far from Chicago.
  • //By coincidence, every man in the room was named Fred.
  • //“I'm going to Boston this weekend.” “What a coincidence! I am too.”
  • //It was no coincidence that he quit his job at the bank a day after the robbery.
  • //a series of strange coincidences
  • //By a fortunate coincidence, we arrived at the theater at the same time.
  • //Scientists have no explanation for the coincidence of these phenomena.
First Known Use
1605, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin coincidentia, derivative of coincident-, coincidens, present participle of coincidere "to agree in nature, coincide"
coincidence
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​logne
noun
co·​logne
kə-ˈlōn

Definition

  • a perfumed liquid composed of alcohol and fragrant oils
  • a cream or paste of cologne sometimes formed into a semisolid stick
Other Words
  • co​logned kə-ˈlōnd adjective
cock​le
noun (1)
cock·​le
ˈkä-kəl

Definition (Entry 1 of 3)

  • any of several weedy plants of the pink family
    especially corn cockle
noun (2)

Definition (Entry 2 of 3)

  • any of various chiefly marine bivalve mollusks (family Cardiidae) having a shell with convex radially ribbed valves
    especially a common edible European bivalve (Cerastoderma edule synonym Cardium edule)
noun (3)

Definition (Entry 3 of 3)

Other Words
Noun (3)
  • cockle verb
First Known Use
Noun (1)
before 12th century, in the meaning defined above
Noun (2)
14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1
Noun (3)
15th century, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English, from Old English coccel
Noun (2)
Middle English cokle, cokkel, cokille "the mollusk Cerastoderma edule, its shell," borrowed from Anglo-French coquile, cokile "eggshell, shell of the cockle or scallop" (continental Old & Middle French coquille), going back to Vulgar Latin *cocīlia or *cocŭlia "shell of a mollusk, nut or egg," alteration of Latin conchȳlia, plural (taken in Vulgar Latin as feminine singular) of conchȳlium "mollusk, shellfish," borrowed from Greek konchýlion "seashell," double diminutive of kónchē "clam, mussel, conch"

NOTE: The etymon with a long front vowel (*co(n)cīlia) is evident in French coquille, Old Occitan cauquilha and a variety of Gallo-Romance dialect forms (see Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, vol. 2, pp. 1002-06), as well as a scattering of Romance forms elsewhere, as Neapolitan skontšiłə "the sea snail Hexaplex trunculus" (see scungilli), Corsican kuntšíłulu "kind of snail," regional Portuguese (Algarve) conquilho "mussel." The form with short u (*cocŭlia) is attested as cagouille "snail, escargot" in western dialects of French (Aunis, Saintonge, Poitou) and cocoille in central dialects (Touraine, Berry); it is also recorded in adjacent dialects of Occitan (Old Occitan cogolha "snail," Dordogne cagoulho). There are again scattered forms in Italo-Romance: kaguya, kuguya "snail" (Rovinj/Rovigno, Istrian Peninsula), concule "kind of mollusk" (Marche), koɳguyə (Abruzzi). Nearly all forms show loss of the nasal consonant and the failure of the front vowel variants to palatalize the velar consonant. Both of these changes have been ascribed to blending with another word, perhaps Latin coccum "the scale insect Kermes ilicis (thought to be a berry or excrescence on the plant)" or *cuscolium with the same sense. The result was a vowel sequence o - o, sometimes dissimilating to a - o. Another conjectural variant attested in eastern Occitan has an added stressed syllable: kakaláw "snail, empty nutshell" (Bas-Dauphiné, i.e., western Dauphiné), cacaláou "snail" (Provence), cagarol (Béziers)—see etymology and note at escargot. — Oxford Latin Dictionary has conchȳlium with long ȳ, which fits the Romance outcome, though length is not indicated for the Greek word in Liddell and Scott or the Cambridge Greek Lexicon.

Noun (3)
Middle English kokell, ultimately from Middle French coquillé wavy or rounded like a shell, from coquille
cod​ger
noun
cod·​ger
ˈkä-jər

Definition

  • an often mildly eccentric and usually elderly fellow //old codger
Examples
  • //Her father is a feisty old codger.
  • //just an old codger who never harmed anyone
First Known Use
circa 1738, in the meaning defined above
History and Etymology
probably alteration of cadger
codger
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​in​ci​dence
noun
co·​in·​ci·​dence
kō-ˈin(t)-sə-dən(t)s -sə-ˌden(t)s

Definition

  • the act or condition of coinciding correspondence //… a perfect coincidence between truth and goodness … — Robert South
  • the occurrence of events that happen at the same time by accident but seem to have some connection //… causal connection requires something more than mere coincidence as to time and place … — Wayne R. LaFave
    also any of these occurrences
Synonyms & Antonyms
Synonyms
coexistence concurrence concurrency
Examples
  • //It was mere coincidence that brought them together so far from Chicago.
  • //By coincidence, every man in the room was named Fred.
  • //“I'm going to Boston this weekend.” “What a coincidence! I am too.”
  • //It was no coincidence that he quit his job at the bank a day after the robbery.
  • //a series of strange coincidences
  • //By a fortunate coincidence, we arrived at the theater at the same time.
  • //Scientists have no explanation for the coincidence of these phenomena.
First Known Use
1605, in the meaning defined at sense 1
History and Etymology
borrowed from Medieval Latin coincidentia, derivative of coincident-, coincidens, present participle of coincidere "to agree in nature, coincide"
coincidence
noun

Synonyms & Antonyms

co​logne
noun
co·​logne
kə-ˈlōn

Definition

  • a perfumed liquid composed of alcohol and fragrant oils
  • a cream or paste of cologne sometimes formed into a semisolid stick
Other Words
  • co​logned kə-ˈlōnd adjective
Examples