Concur - meaning and definition. What is Concur
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What (who) is Concur - definition

NEED TO PROVE THE SIMULTANEOUS OCCURRENCE OF BOTH ACTUS REUS ("GUILTY ACTION") AND MENS REA ("GUILTY MIND"), TO CONSTITUTE A CRIME
Concur

concur         
v. n.
1.
Be conjoined, be combined, meet.
2.
Agree, coincide, harmonize.
3.
Co-operate, help, combine, conspire, contribute jointly.
concur         
¦ verb (concurs, concurring, concurred)
1. (often concur with) agree.
2. happen at the same time.
Origin
ME: from L. concurrere 'run together, assemble in crowds'.
concur         
(concurs, concurring, concurred)
If one person concurs with another person, the two people agree. You can also say that two people concur. (FORMAL)
Local feeling does not necessarily concur with the press...
Daniels and Franklin concurred in an investigator's suggestion that the police be commended...
Butler and Stone concur that the war threw people's lives into a moral relief...
Four other judges concurred...
After looking at the jug, Faulkner concurred that it was late Roman, third or fourth century...
= agree
V-RECIP: V with n, V in n, pl-n V that, pl-n V, NON-RECIP: V that

Wikipedia

Concurrence

In Western jurisprudence, concurrence (also contemporaneity or simultaneity) is the apparent need to prove the simultaneous occurrence of both actus reus ("guilty action") and mens rea ("guilty mind"), to constitute a crime; except in crimes of strict liability. In theory, if the actus reus does not hold concurrence in point of time with the mens rea then no crime has been committed.

Examples of use of Concur
1. "The 6.' percent figure doesn‘t really concur with my feelings.
2. But he and Duda concur that the struggle continues, regardless.
3. Mr Blair appears to concur, without actually saying yes.
4. Negroponte, who had to concur in Kerr‘s nomination.
5. Russian experts on violent xenophobia concur that St.