v. [f. CO- 1.] intr. To inhere together.

1

1836–7.  Sir W. Hamilton, Metaph., viii. (1870), 138. The seeming incompatibility of the two series of phenomena to coinhere in one.

2

  So Co-inherence; Co-inherent a.

3

1817.  Coleridge, Biog. Lit., 66. Both are ab initio identical and co-inherent. Ibid. (1824), Aids Refl., App., Wks. 1858, I. 395. Their interpenetration and co-inherence.

4

1846.  Mill, Logic, I. v. § 6. The co-inherence of two attributes is but the co-existence of the two states of consciousness implied in their meaning.

5