From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishconcordancecon‧cor‧dance /kənˈkɔːdəns $ -ɔːr-/ noun 1 [countable]SL an alphabetical list of all the words used in a book or set of books, with information about where they can be found and usually about how they are used a Shakespeare concordanceconcordance to a concordance to the Bible2 [countable] a list of all the words in a book, magazine etc, held on a computer database, showing every example of a particular word in the book etc concordance lines3 [uncountable] formalLIKE/SIMILAR the state of being similar to something else or in agreement with it the concordance between the proposals
Examples from the Corpus
concordance• About 2,000 concordance lines were obtained for each test word, taken from a 22 million-token corpus.• Concordances produced by computer may differ from traditional hand-made concordances in several ways.• "There is apparent concordance among the unions, " Buford said.• Similarity in a trait is measured with a value called concordance.• Importantly, the difference in concordance rates could not be accounted for by the different concordance rates for alcoholism alone.• Ozenfant sought to discover consistent elements of form in nature: concordances, laws, a universal and harmonious language of art.• Instead, the concordance rate has been found to lie between 35 and 58 percent.• Hence it is difficult to determine whether concordance in monozygous twins is due to shared genes or shared early environment.