COHORT


Meaning of COHORT in English

ˈkōˌhȯ(ə)rt, -ȯ(ə)t, usu -d.+V noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle French & Latin; Middle French cohorte, from Latin cohort-, cohors enclosure, cohort — more at court

1.

a. : one of ten divisions of an ancient Roman legion comprising at first 300 but later 500 to 600 soldiers

b. : a similar subdivision in some organizations of Roman cavalry or auxiliary troops

c. : a group of warriors or soldiers

d. : company , band , group

a loyal cohort of adherents — S.N.Behrman

e. : a group of individuals or vital statistics about them having a statistical factor in common in a demographic study (as year of birth)

data that tells what happened to a cohort of patients admitted in a specific year — Diagnostic & Statistical Manual

a cohort of 100,000 females starting life together

2. : a taxonomic category of somewhat indefinite rank:

a. botany : a category nearly equivalent to and now generally replaced by the modern order

b. zoology : suborder

3.

a. : companion , accomplice

he and three alleged housebreaking cohorts were arraigned on attempted burglary charges — Springfield (Massachusetts) Republican

b. : follower , supporter

a congressman accompanied by a group of loyal cohorts

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.