0 past simple and past participle of cohabit
1 If two people, especially a man and woman who are not married, cohabit, they live together and have a sexual relationship:
Among women, those who cohabited prior to marriage had higher mean scores than their directly married counterparts.
Well, he would undress his women, so that they could be rubbed with oil, and he cohabited with each one.
Prior to 1964, racial conservatives and social welfare liberals cohabited the same party.
Centurions, too, apparently cohabited with their wives inside the walls.
It does not provide evidence that some couples cohabited without marrying, merely that no evidence of a marriage has been found.
She has cohabited with two successive partners with a child from each relationship and was brought up largely by her grandfather.
As in any population, our sample included persons who had divorced, cohabited and experienced widowhood since their initial move.
The wife who cohabited with the husband was the formally recognized wife, in other words, the ie wife.