From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishconcordantcon‧cor‧dant /kənˈkɔːdənt $ -ɔːr-/ adjective formal LIKE/SIMILARbeing in agreement or having the same regular pattern
Examples from the Corpus
concordant• But this study has, for the first time, clearly demonstrated a genetic difference between concordant and discordant identical twins.• The monozygotic twin material consisted of both concordant and discordant twin pairs, and some unpaired healthy twins.• The study included pairs of twins both concordant and discordant with regard to ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease.• Even concordant Crohn's disease twins affected by the disease usually showed very dissimilar subclass ratios.• concordant opinionsOrigin concordant (1400-1500) French Latin, present participle of concordare “to agree”, from concors; → CONCORD