0 past participle, past simple of co-exist --
1 to live or exist together at the same time or in the same place: --
Persistent dynastic traditions related to the politics of the declining kingdom co-existed for some time with emergent clan traditions.
Both co-existed but were of varying significance.
Violence, fraud and bribery often co-existed, although their occurrence may have been more intense in some constituencies than in others.
In the nineteenth century, as today, the older party papers co-existed with the newer papers, whether nonpartisan or partisan, that were independent of party control.
These meanings co-existed uneasily, giving the female body a disturbing instability of meaning.
Similarly, an ideology of procedural correctness co-existed with a pragmatic attitude to forum shopping.
Thus, during this period, ethnicity co-existed with and worked to the benefit of nationalism.
Instead, he demonstrates how they have consistently co-existed and have frequently exhibited a mutually reinforcing relation to one another.