co-author
nounEtymology
Definitions
Alternative form of coauthor.
- The report's co-authors Ian Wray, David Thrower, and Jim Steer point to the building of the motorways in the 1960s and 1970s, when new sections were added progressively and in "financially digestible chunks".
- While Linder prefers his taters cut skinny, as they are in restaurant iterations of the dish, his co-author, the television chef Johanna Westman, says she prefers them thick, as in her Grandma Alva’s recipe.
- “This suggests that most of the foraging that the bees do occurs very close to the hive,” study co-author Margarita López-Uribe, an associate professor of entomology at PSU, told CNN on Monday.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for co-author. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA