concord
                    
      英 [ˈkɒŋ.kɔːd]                            
                        美 [ˈkɑːŋ.kɔːrd]                    
                    
                    
                    
                 
                
             
                        
            
                1、con- "together" + cord-.
2、literally "hearts together".
3、=> of the same mind, concord, harmony, agreement, treaty.            
                        
            
                concord 和谐,一致con-, 强调。-cord, 心,词源同heart, cordial. 即同心的,一致的。
             
                        
            
                
- concord
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concord: [13] Etymologically, concord signifies that two people’s hearts are together, as one. The word comes, via Old French concorde, from Latin concordia, a derivative of the adjective concors. This meant literally ‘hearts together’, and thus ‘of one mind, in harmony’. It was formed from the prefix com- ‘together’ and the noun cors ‘heart’ (source of English cordial and French coeur). Concordat [17] comes from the past participle of the Latin verb concordāre ‘agree’. Discord [13], the antonym of concord, has a parallel origin, coming ultimately from Latin discors ‘disagreeing’.
 => concordat, cordial, discord
- concord (n.)
- early 14c., from Old French concorde (12c.) "concord, harmony, agreement, treaty," from Latin concordia "agreement, union," from concors (genitive concordis) "of the same mind," literally "hearts together," from com- "together" (see com-) + cor "heart," from PIE root *kerd- "heart" (see heart).
 
                
- 1. living in concord with neighbouring states  
- 与邻国和睦相处
- 2. Concord inaugurated a new era in airplane travel. 
- 协和飞机开创了空中旅行的新纪元.
- 3. These states had lived in concord for centuries. 
- 这些国家几个世纪以来一直和睦相处.
- 4. His speech did nothing for racial concord. 
- 他的讲话对种族和谐没有作用.
- 5. The root for this development lies in the evolution of CONCORD itself. 
- 这些发展都根基于CONCORD本身的演变.