Concomitance
Concomitance
in ecclesiastical phrase, is the Romish doctrine that under the form of bread the blood of Christ is also received, although the chalice is not partaken.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Concomitance
(Latin concomitantia, accompaniment), literally the act or state of being associated, the term has received wide currency in logic, particularly since John Stuart Mill clearly formulated the method of concomitant variations, as the concurrent existence, appearance or disappearance of certain characters which, under circumstances, admit but do not necessarily postulate causal interrelatedness. — K.F.L.
Precise conjunction or accompaniment, spatial or temporal. — C.A.B.