Associations to the word «Concord»
Noun
- Lexington
- Hampshire
- Emerson
- Sudbury
- Waldo
- Hawthorne
- Discord
- Walden
- Acton
- Lutheran
- Bronson
- Speedway
- Claremont
- Gage
- Massachusetts
- Bunker
- Augsburg
- Concordia
- Noun
- Grape
- Pronoun
- Middlesex
- Pleasant
- Catechism
- Jazz
- Nc
- Turnpike
- Lowell
- Adjective
- Ives
- Charlotte
- Contra
- Confession
- Prefix
- Prescott
- Militia
- Verb
- Louisa
- Asturias
- Stagecoach
- Harmony
- Carlisle
- Melody
- Ephraim
- Carolina
- Boston
- Hollow
- Nathaniel
- Wilmington
- Parramatta
- Negation
- Formula
- Ripley
- Rivers
- Martinez
- Bedford
- Byrd
- Singular
- Maynard
- Pond
- Pierce
- Luther
- Dorchester
- Staten
- Unity
- Patriot
- Portsmouth
- Evangelical
- Suffix
- Regular
- Niagara
- Hancock
- Winery
- Hymn
- Syntax
- Hornet
- Trenton
- Munition
- Delaware
- Monitor
- Sonata
- Salem
- Knoxville
- Belmont
- Lowe
- Ralph
- Fayette
- Township
Adjective
Verb
Wiktionary
CONCORD, noun. A state of agreement; harmony; union.
CONCORD, noun. (obsolete) Agreement by stipulation; compact; covenant; treaty or league
CONCORD, noun. (grammar) Agreement of words with one another, in gender, number, person, or case.
CONCORD, noun. (legal) (obsolete) An agreement between the parties to a fine of land in reference to the manner in which it should pass, being an acknowledgment that the land in question belonged to the complainant. See fine.
CONCORD, noun. (probably influenced by chord) (music) An agreeable combination of tones simultaneously heard; a consonant chord; consonance; harmony.
CONCORD, noun. A variety of American grape, with large dark blue (almost black) grapes in compact clusters; a Concord grape.
CONCORD, verb. (intransitive) (obsolete) To agree; to act together
CONCORD, proper noun. Any of several places:
CONCORD, proper noun. The state capital of New Hampshire.
CONCORD, proper noun. A city in Northern California.
CONCORD, proper noun. A city in Massachusetts and a site of the Battle of Lexington and Concord.
CONCORD, proper noun. A CDP in Alabama.
CONCORD, proper noun. A town in Arkansas.
CONCORD, proper noun. A town in Georgia.
CONCORD, proper noun. A village in Illinois.
CONCORD, proper noun. A city in Kentucky.
CONCORD, proper noun. A village in Michigan.
CONCORD, proper noun. A CDP in Missouri.
CONCORD, proper noun. A village in Nebraska.
CONCORD, proper noun. A town in New York.
CONCORD, proper noun. A city and county seat in North Carolina.
CONCORD, proper noun. A town in Vermont.
CONCORD, proper noun. A CDP in Campbell County, Virginia.
CONCORD, proper noun. A town in Wisconsin.
CONCORD, proper noun. Alternative letter-case form of concord
CONCORD BUGGIES, noun. Plural of Concord buggy
CONCORD BUGGY, noun. (historical) A kind of buggy having a body with low sides, and side springs.
CONCORD GRAPE, noun. A cultivar of grapes from the species Vitis labrusca.
CONCORD GRAPES, noun. Plural of Concord grape
Dictionary definition
CONCORD, noun. Capital of the state of New Hampshire; located in south central New Hampshire on the Merrimack river.
CONCORD, noun. A harmonious state of things in general and of their properties (as of colors and sounds); congruity of parts with one another and with the whole.
CONCORD, noun. The determination of grammatical inflection on the basis of word relations.
CONCORD, noun. Town in eastern Massachusetts near Boston where the first battle of the American Revolution was fought.
CONCORD, noun. Agreement of opinions.
CONCORD, noun. The first battle of the American Revolution (April 19, 1775).
CONCORD, verb. Go together; "The colors don't harmonize"; "Their ideas concorded".
CONCORD, verb. Arrange by concord or agreement; "Concord the conditions for the marriage of the Prince of Wales with a commoner".
CONCORD, verb. Arrange the words of a text so as to create a concordance; "The team concorded several thousand nouns, verbs, and adjectives".
CONCORD, verb. Be in accord; be in agreement; "We agreed on the terms of the settlement"; "I can't agree with you!"; "I hold with those who say life is sacred"; "Both philosophers concord on this point".
Wise words
One merit of poetry few persons will deny: it says more and
in fewer words than prose.