0 present participle of cohere --
1 If an argument or theory coheres, all the different stages fit together to form a reasonable whole. --
The flower calyx is deeply four-parted, very downy, orange brown within, imbricate in bud, persistent, cohering with the base of the ovary.
For instance, some truths might realize truth's function by corresponding to reality while others might do so by cohering with a larger set of propositions.
The result of cohering the law may be expressed in categories that do not correspond to the true moral categories.
Cohering proposals of this sort, drawn up with data from different domains, are significant for the growth of theoretical understanding of languages in contact.
Managerialism has provided a cohering thread across the range of different organisational forms that have emerged in the remaking of public services.
Still, cohering with our tangled moral intuitions might not be sufficient justification for favouring disjunctivism.