A concordance is a list of the words in a text or group of texts, with information about where in the text each word occurs and how often it occurs. The sentences each word occurs in are often given
an alphabetical list of all words or principal words used by an author in his/her work(s) It also gives the location of the word(s) in the text and defines its use
If there is concordance between two things, they are similar to each other or consistent with each other. a partial concordance between theoretical expectations and empirical evidence
For two or more loci or traits typed in offspring from a backcross or RI strain, the presence of alleles (or expression of a trait) derived from the same parental chromosome (see Chapter 9)
An alphabetical index of all the words in a text or corpus of texts, showing every contextual occurrence of a word: for example, a concordance of Shakespeares works Not bloody likely How about a glossary?
An alphabetical list of key words that can be used for locating a Bible quotation or identifying related material It catalogues the places in the text where significant words may be found, with their chapter and verse
a list of the words used in a text or group of texts The normal way of consulting a corpus is to look at concordances which show words in the context in which they occur
Search patterns in their context This is an analysis that shows search patterns and their context in one line (similiar to KWICs) The search patterns are in the center of a line, the rest consists of the context before and after the search pattern In INTEXT the length of the line is variable, and the results can be formatted in two ways: as short and long concordances The default line length for short concordances is 79 characters, for long ones 131 characters
An alphabetical listing of all the important words in a text and their textual locations; a useful tool for studying biblical themes See the Bibliography of this text
An index of the words found in the Bible, with the Bible references in which they are found My personal favorite is Strong's Exhaustive Concordance; "so plain in its arrangement that a child cannot miss his way in using it; so correct in its citations that the most scholarly can depend on it "
An alphabetical index of principal words in a book A Bible concordance is an enormously practical aid to finding scriptures Even small print editions of the {New World Translation} have abbreviated concordances in them In 1973, the Society published the Comprehensive Concordance for NW, containing all but the most common words such as a and the Although amazingly useful as a Bible research tool, this publication is a prime candidate for the ``expensive publication most often found in homes with the shrink wrap still on it'' award Concordances are still good to have around because of their portability, e g , to carry on Bible studies However, the power of a concordance pales into insignificance in comparison with a good lookup program on a computer
a book in which the principle words used in any work such as the Bible, Shakespeare, etc are arranged alphabetically and the book, chapter, verse, act, scene, line, or other subdivision in which each occurs are noted