All cohere synonyms
co·here
C c verb cohere
- consolidate — If you consolidate something that you have, for example power or success, you strengthen it so that it becomes more effective or secure.
- cleave — To cleave something means to split or divide it into two separate parts, often violently.
- glue — a hard, impure, protein gelatin, obtained by boiling skins, hoofs, and other animal substances in water, that when melted or diluted is a strong adhesive.
- join — to bring in contact, connect, or bring or put together: to join hands; to join pages with a staple.
- associate — If you associate someone or something with another thing, the two are connected in your mind.
- bind — If something binds people together, it makes them feel as if they are all part of the same group or have something in common.
- coalesce — If two or more things coalesce, they come together and form a larger group or system.
- unite — to join, combine, or incorporate so as to form a single whole or unit.
- adhere — If you adhere to an opinion or belief, you support or hold it.
- merge — to cause to combine or coalesce; unite.
- fuse — Electricity. a protective device, used in an electric circuit, containing a conductor that melts under heat produced by an excess current, thereby opening the circuit. Compare circuit breaker.
- combine — If you combine two or more things or if they combine, they exist together.
- connect — If something or someone connects one thing to another, or if one thing connects to another, the two things are joined together.
- hold — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
- blend — If you blend substances together or if they blend, you mix them together so that they become one substance.
- conform — If something conforms to something such as a law or someone's wishes, it is of the required type or quality.
- accord — An accord between countries or groups of people is a formal agreement, for example to end a war.
- square — a rectangle having all four sides of equal length.
- dovetail — a tenon broader at its end than at its base; pin.
- relate — to tell; give an account of (an event, circumstance, etc.).
- correspond — If one thing corresponds to another, there is a close similarity or connection between them. You can also say that two things correspond.
- comport — If you comport yourself in a particular way, you behave in that way.
- harmonize — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
- go — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- check — Check is also a noun.
- cling — If you cling to someone or something, you hold onto them tightly.
- stick to — to pierce or puncture with something pointed, as a pin, dagger, or spear; stab: to stick one's finger with a needle.
- match — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
- tally — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
- follow — to come after in sequence, order of time, etc.: The speech follows the dinner.
- agree — If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion.
- cheque — A cheque is a printed form on which you write an amount of money and who it is to be paid to. Your bank then pays the money to that person from your account.
- harmonise — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
- check out — When you check out of a hotel or clinic where you have been staying, or if someone checks you out, you pay the bill and leave.
- fit in — belong
- hang together — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
- hold water — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
- make sense — any of the faculties, as sight, hearing, smell, taste, or touch, by which humans and animals perceive stimuli originating from outside or inside the body: My sense of smell tells me that dinner is ready.
- stick — a thrust with a pointed instrument; stab.
- gel — Physical Chemistry. a semirigid colloidal dispersion of a solid with a liquid or gas, as jelly, glue, etc.
- jell — to congeal; become jellylike in consistency.
- stick together — be united