Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • intransitive verb To stick or hold together in a mass that resists separation.
  • intransitive verb To have internal elements or parts logically connected so that aesthetic consistency results.
  • intransitive verb To cause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • To stick, or stick together; cleave; be united; hold fast, as one thing to another, or parts of the same mass, or two substances that attract each other.
  • To be well connected or coherent; follow regularly in the natural or logical order; be suited in connection, as the parts of a discourse, or as arguments in a train of reasoning.
  • To suit; be fitted; agree.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • intransitive verb To stick together; to cleave; to be united; to hold fast, as parts of the same mass.
  • intransitive verb To be united or connected together in subordination to one purpose; to follow naturally and logically, as the parts of a discourse, or as arguments in a train of reasoning; to be logically consistent.
  • intransitive verb obsolete To suit; to agree; to fit.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb To stick together physically, by adhesion or figuratively by common purpose.
  • verb To be consistent as part of a group.

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • verb have internal elements or parts logically connected so that aesthetic consistency results
  • verb cause to form a united, orderly, and aesthetically consistent whole
  • verb come or be in close contact with; stick or hold together and resist separation

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Latin cohaerēre : co-, co- + haerēre, to cling.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From the Latin cohaereō ("I cohere”, “I cling (closely) together”, “I harmonise”, “I am consistent (with)”, “I am in agreement with").

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Examples

  • We suggest instead that Mormons cohere because they are a religious group that resembles an ethnicity—one based on belief, not blood.

    American Grace Robert D. Putnam 2010

  • But the efforts to distance themselves from blacks did not cohere into a new Italian American racial identity and culture until the 1940s.

    A Renegade History of the United States Thaddeus Russell 2010

  • If an offensive line which played without three scholarship players in the April 24 spring game can stay healthy and cohere, even the best defenses will have a difficult time stopping Tech's collection of talent.

    Around the Atlantic Coast Conference 2010

  • The montage of icons does cohere into a sort of meta-icon perhaps, of dogs that are (for me) short-haired, middling-sized, with dark-brown fur; but this is … a sort of cubist collage of perspectives that spills out beyond its casual frame, each dog a Cerberus with three heads superimposed one over the other, snub-nosed and long-snouted, ears pricked and flattened, slavering and not slavering.

    Archive 2009-07-01 Hal Duncan 2009

  • They must recognize that it is possible to work with Tehran where their interests cohere, even as they seek to counter it at other points.

    Erin Fitzgerald: Iran's Shadow Diplomacy Erin Fitzgerald 2011

  • It turns out that not only do people care about how well various public policies cohere with their existing cultural worldviews, but their beliefs about the empirical evidence are also derived from these cultural worldviews.

    2009 August | Serendipity 2009

  • In the reader's imagination these shards of place and time woven into the mimetic weft cohere into a sense of location, layout of objects, orientation of characters within that immediate frame -- at night, on a street corner, where a side-street joins a wide thoroughfare.

    Notes on Worldscape Hal Duncan 2009

  • No single state government will have the resources to form the nucleus of a new Union and the entire group of states will be too fragmented and fracking argumentative to cohere as a federation.

    Think Progress » FBI Issues Warning About Threat From Yet Another Anti-Government Group With Ties To The Radical Right 2010

  • Milieu: Separate locales cohere across the suturing of scenes -- e.g. in one scene the character is on the road; in the next they are booking into the motel.

    Notes on Worldscape Hal Duncan 2009

  • It turns out that not only do people care about how well various public policies cohere with their existing cultural worldviews, but their beliefs about the empirical evidence are also derived from these cultural worldviews.

    Social epistemology and climate denialism | Serendipity 2009

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  • Hold or stick together

    July 8, 2014