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Concurrent is a term meaning "same time." Other possibilities are contemporaneous or synchronous.
Ever and Always do not mean the same. Ever is like do you "ever" or trapped for"ever" always is like every single time every time. If you say for ever and always then it means the same. Forever and Always means Forever: til the end of time Always: In any circumstance. So no they don't ever mean the same. While they are very similar.
Yes, when an ablative absolute has a present participle, it indicates that the action of the participle is happening simultaneously with the main action of the sentence. This construction is commonly used in Latin to provide additional context or background information to the main clause.
By what I have studdied France kind of has the same term limits as the U.S. They serve the same time though.
Bimanual
septuplets.
An area where all use the same clock time is called a time zone
They are contemporaries of each other.
no. when you have a main priority, like faith, you don't have time for that.
Sycronised
A Dozen!
The correct term for cross-eyes is strabismus. This is a condition where both eyes do not look at the same point at the same time.