English edit

Etymology edit

cohort +‎ -mate

Noun edit

cohortmate (plural cohortmates)

  1. A fellow member of a cohort.
    • 2003, Karl L. Alexander, Doris R. Entwisle, Susan L. Dauber, On the Success of Failure: A Reassessment of the Effects of Retention in the Primary School Grades, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 22:
      To see how they are faring relative to their original cohortmates, we would compare their performance against that of children at point C- this is a same-age comparison. The corresponding comparison 2 years post retention involves []
    • 2016 October 21, Neil Myler, Building and Interpreting Possession Sentences, MIT Press, →ISBN:
      To my NYU cohortmates, it's hard to know what to say. I'll never forget those group outings in our early years (although the outings that ended up at The Continental are harder to recall, for some mysterious reason).
    • 2017 November 1, Katie Walker Grimes, Christ Divided: Antiblackness as Corporate Vice, Fortress Press, →ISBN:
      ... my Boston College cohortmates, Joshua Snyder, Michael Cagney, and Nichole Flores; my housemate, Michael Jaycox, who allowed me to try many of the ideas contained in this book out on him during impromptu conversations in our kitchen; []