overlapping in duration; "concurrently with the conference an exhibition of things associated with Rutherford was held"; "going to school and holding a job at the same time"
One of the supernumerary days of the year over fifty-two complete weeks; so called because they concur with the solar cycle, the course of which they follow
(adj ) Characteristic of the sharing of computer resources whereby two or more processes (or programs) can access the computer's processor simultaneously The sharing results in parallel calculations or data manipulation
1 Existing together; in conjunction with In criminal law, concurrent sentence describes multiple sentences that a convicted defendant is to serve at the same time BACK TO TOP
A license that may be installed on a network The number of user licenses purchased dictates how many users may access the program from the network A non-concurrent license must be purchased on a per user basis and installed on individual computers
Pertaining to the occurrence of two or more activities within a given interval of time Concurrent processes can alternately use shared common resources
A diagnostic condition that enables a diagnostic, test, tool, or exerciser to run with default parameters that have minimal effect on customer operations SIO
Concurrent events or situations happen at the same time. Galerie St. Etienne is holding three concurrent exhibitions Concurrent with her acting career, Bron has managed to write two books of her own. + concurrently con·cur·rent·ly He was jailed for 33 months to run concurrently with a sentence he is already serving for burglary
concurrently
Silbentrennung
con·cur·rent·ly
Türkische aussprache
kınkırıntli
Aussprache
/kənˈkərəntlē/ /kənˈkɜrəntliː/
Etymologie
[ -'k&r-&nt, -'k&-r& ] (adjective.) 14th century. Middle English, from Middle French and Latin; Middle French, from Latin concurrent-, concurrens, present participle of concurrere.