coendure
Appearance
See also: co-endure
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]coendure (third-person singular simple present coendures, present participle coenduring, simple past and past participle coendured)
- (intransitive) Alternative form of co-endure
- 1867, Rev. George Rogers, Adventures of Elder Triptolemus Tub: Comprising Important and Startling Disclosures Concerning Hell:
- Yet the latter, 'and his works, shall eternally coendure with the former, and the unoriginated principles of his moral nature!
- 2000, Qiyang Chen, Human Computer Interaction: Issues and Challenges, →ISBN, page 75:
- A genre may also be related to other genres the instances preceding, coenduring or following one another in a particular recurrent context, collectively responding to a wider communicative purpose.
- 2014, Oliver Stone, Peter Kuznick, The Concise Untold History of the United States, →ISBN, page 143:
- And in coenduring with and containing our fear and uncertainty, we become naturally stronger.
- (transitive) Alternative form of co-endure
- 1991, Adrienne von Speyr, The Birth of the Church: Meditations on John 18-21, →ISBN, page 119:
- Magdalen, who was permitted to receive the Lord's grace, now fulfills the office of her gratitude and penance by coenduring something of the suffering of the Cross.