coherence
The quality of cohering, or being coherent; internal consistency.
Noun
- The quality of cohering, or being coherent; internal consistency.
- His arguments lacked coherence.
- Mrs. Grose listened with dumb emotion; she forbore to ask me what this meaning might be; so that, presently, to put the thing with some coherence and with the mere aid of her presence to my own mind, I went on: “That...
- He would then put down his pencil and stare in front of him, and wonder in what respects the world was different—it had, perhaps, more solidity, more coherence, more importance, greater depth. - 1915, Virginia Woolf,...
- The quality of forming a unified whole.
- When I come to his connection with Blanche Stroeve I am exasperated by the fragmentariness of the facts at my disposal. To give my story coherence I should describe the progress of their tragic union, but I know nothing...
- A logical arrangement of parts, as in writing.
- In a lesson on coherence in academic writing, students engaged in the following discussion on the online platform TodaysMeet. - 2017, Di Zou, James Lambert, “Feedback methods for student voice in the digital age”, in...
- The property of having the same wavelength and phase.
- A semantic relationship between different parts of the same text.
Coordinate Terms: cohesion
Origin
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *ḱe? Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm Proto-Italic *kom Proto-Italic *kom- Latin con- Latin haereō Latin cohaereō Latin cohaerēns Proto-Indo-European *-yós Proto-Italic *-ios Old Latin -ios Latin -ius Latin -ia Latin cohaerentiader. Middle French coherenceder. English coherence From Middle French coherence, from Latin cohaerentia. By surface analysis, cohere + -ence.
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Derived
anticoherence autocoherence bicoherence coherence time coherin multicoherence overcoherence quantum coherence recoherence supercoherence tricoherence unicoherence