Coadjustment
(Co`ad*just"ment) n. Mutual adjustment.

Coadjutant
(Co*ad"ju*tant) a. Mutually assisting or operating; helping. J. Philips.

Coadjutant
(Co*ad"ju*tant), n. An assistant. R. North.

Coadjuting
(Co*ad"ju*ting), a. Mutually assisting. [Obs.] Drayton.

Coadjutive
(Co*ad"ju*tive) a. Rendering mutual aid; coadjutant. Feltham.

Coadjutor
(Co`ad*ju"tor) n. [L. See Co-, and Aid.]

1. One who aids another; an assistant; a coworker.

Craftily outwitting her perjured coadjutor.
Sheridan.

2. (R. C. Ch.) The assistant of a bishop or of a priest holding a benefice.

Coadjutorship
(Co`ad*ju"tor*ship), n. The state or office of a coadjutor; joint assistance. Pope.

Coadjutress
(Co`ad*ju"tress Co`ad*ju"trix) n. A female coadjutor or assistant. Holland. Smollett.

Coadjuvancy
(Co*ad"ju*van*cy) n. Joint help; coöperation. Sir T. Browne.

Coadjuvant
(Co*ad"ju*vant) a. Coöperating.

Coadjuvant
(Co*ad"ju*vant), n. (Med.) An adjuvant.

Coadunate
(Co*ad"u*nate) a. [L. coadunatus, p. p. of coadunare to unite. See Adunation.] (Bot.) United at the base, as contiguous lobes of a leaf.

Coadunation
(Co*ad`u*na"tion) n. [L. coadunatio.] Union, as in one body or mass; unity. Jer. Taylor.

The coadunation of all the civilized provinces.
Coleridge.

Coadunition
(Co*ad`u*ni"tion) n. [Pref. co- + pref. ad- + unition.] Coadunation. [R.] Sir M. Hale.

Coadventure
(Co`ad*ven"ture) n. An adventure in which two or more persons are partakers.

Coadventure
(Co`ad*ven"ture), v. i. To share in a venture. Howell.

Coadventurer
(Co`ad*ven"tur*er) n. A fellow adventurer.

Coafforest
(Co`af*for"est) v. t. To convert into, or add to, a forest. Howell.

Coag
(Coag) n. See Coak, a kind of tenon.

Coagency
(Co*a"gen*cy) n. Agency in common; joint agency or agent. Coleridge.

Coagent
(Co*a"gent) n. An associate in an act; a coworker. Drayton.

Coagment
(Co`ag*ment") v. t. [L. coagmentare, fr. coagmentum a joining together, fr. cogere. See Cogent.] To join together. [Obs.] Glanvill.

Coagmentation
(Co*ag`men*ta"tion) n. [L. coagmentatio.] The act of joining, or the state of being joined, together; union. [Obs.] B. Jonson.

Coagulability
(Co*ag`u*la*bil"i*ty) n. The quality of being coagulable; capacity of being coagulated. Ure.


  By PanEris using Melati.

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