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conterminous    
a. 相接的,连接的,有同一延伸的

相接的,连接的,有同一延伸的

conterminous
adj 1: connecting without a break; within a common boundary;
"the 48 conterminous states"; "the contiguous 48 states"
[synonym: {conterminous}, {contiguous}]
2: having a common boundary or edge; abutting; touching; "Rhode
Island has two bordering states; Massachusetts and
Conncecticut"; "the side of Germany conterminous with
France"; "Utah and the contiguous state of Idaho";
"neighboring cities" [synonym: {adjacent}, {conterminous},
{contiguous}, {neighboring(a)}]
3: being of equal extent or scope or duration [synonym:
{coextensive}, {coterminous}, {conterminous}]

Conterminous \Con*ter"mi*nous\, a. [L. conterminus. Cf.
{Conterminous}.]
Having the same bounds, or limits; bordering upon;
contiguous.
[1913 Webster]

This conformed so many of them as were conterminous to
the colonies and garrisons, to the Roman laws. --Sir M.
Hale.
[1913 Webster] Conterranean

47 Moby Thesaurus words for "conterminous":
accompanying, adjacent, adjoining, agreeing, bordering, buck,
coetaneous, coeternal, coeval, coexistent, coexisting,
coinstantaneous, collateral, combat, concomitant, concurrent,
connecting, contemporaneous, contemporary, contend, contiguous,
coterminous, dispute, duel, end to end, endeavor, endways, endwise,
face to face, fight, immediate, isochronal, isochronous, joined,
juxtaposed, neighbor, neighboring, next, oppose, repel, rival,
simultaneous, traverse, unison, unisonous, vie, withstand


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  • Coterminous vs. Conterminous? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Are they interchangeable? Based on this n-gram 'coterminous' is more common, though 'conterminous' seems more accurate? Coterminous having the same border or covering the same area being the same in extent; coextensive in range or scope Conterminous having a common boundary; bordering; contiguous meeting at the ends; without an intervening gap
  • Do coterminous and conterminous have exactly the same meaning?
    Yes, conterminous and coterminous both mean "to share a boundary" According to the entries for co- and con-, below, co- is an Anglicising of con-, which is possibly why Latin purists prefer con- In this instance co- and con- both mean together or with Etymology of co- in Latin, the form of com- in compounds with stems beginning in vowels and h- and gn- (see com-) Taken in English from 17c
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    In this case, in English Euro (or euro) has two accepted plural forms: euros and euro In Community legislative acts the plural forms of euro and cent are spelled without the s, notwithstanding normal English usage Otherwise, normal English plurals are recommended and used; with many local variations such as 'centime' in France Wikipedia
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