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      • coherent adjective us / koʊˈhɪr. ə nt / uk / kəʊˈhɪə.r ə nt / Add to word list C2 If an argument, set of ideas, or a plan is coherent, it is clear and carefully considered, and each part of it connects or follows in a natural or reasonable way.
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  1. If an argument, set of ideas, or a plan is coherent, it is clear and carefully considered, and each part of it connects or follows in a natural or reasonable way. C2. If someone is coherent, you can understand what that person says:

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    • I. What Is Coherence?
    • II. Examples of Coherence
    • III. The Importance of Coherence
    • V. Examples in Literature and Scholarship
    • VI. Examples in Media and Pop Culture
    • VII. Related Terms

    Coherence describes the way anything, such as an argument (or part of an argument) “hangs together.” If something has coherence, its parts are well-connected and all heading in the same direction. Without coherence, a discussion may not make sense or may be difficult for the audience to follow. It’s an extremely important quality of formal writing....

    There are many distinct features that help create a sense of coherence. Let’s look at an extended example and go through some of the features that make it seem coherent. Most people would agree that this is a fairly coherent paragraph: 1. Topic Sentence. The paragraph starts with a very clear, declarative topic sentence, and the rest of the paragra...

    Say you’re reading a piece of academic writing – maybe a textbook. As you read, you find yourself drifting off, having to read the same sentence over and over before you understand it. Maybe, after a while, you get frustrated and give up on the chapter. What happened? Nine times out of ten, this is a symptom of incoherence. Your brain is unable to ...

    Example 1

    Since coherence is subjective, people will disagree about the examples. This is especially true in scholarly fields, where authors are writing for a very specific audience of experts; anyone outside that audience is likely to see the work as incoherent. For example, the various fields of analytic philosophy are a great place to look for coherence in scholarly work. Analytic philosophers are trained to write very carefully, with all the steps in the argument carefully laid out ahead of time. S...

    Example 2

    For writing Indian Schools: a Nation’s Neglect, journalist Jill Burcum was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in the editorial writing category. An excellent example of coherence in journalistic writing, the editorial deals with the shabby federal schools that are meant for Native Americans on reservations. The essay’s paragraphs are much shorter than they would be in an essay. Yet each one still revolves around a single, tightly focused set of ideas. You can find key concepts (such as “neglect”)...

    Example 1

    You can often see something like argumentative coherence in political satire. Good satire always focuses on a single question and lampoons it in a highly coherent manner. Watch, for example, Jon Stewart’s opening monologues on The Daily Show. Whatever your opinion on Stewart’s politics, it’s hard to argue with the fact that he uses terms carefully. He transitions smoothly and focuses on a single, tightly controlled set of concepts in each monologue.

    Example 2

    Sports debates can also provide a good example of coherence. When you watch a show about sports (like SportsCenter or First Take), pay attention to the attributes of coherence. How do the hosts and guests use their terms? Do they repeat key terms? Do they start each monologue with a “topic sentence”? Do they stick to one topic, or do they go off on tangents?

    Cogency

    “Cogency” sounds like “coherence,” but means convincing or persuasive. The two terms are related, though: an argument cannot be cogent if it’s not coherent, because coherence is essential to persuasion. However, an argument could be coherent but not cogent (i.e. it’s clear, unified, and easy to read, but the argument does not persuade its reader).

    Focus

    Focus is also related to coherence. Often, coherence problems emerge when the focus is too broad. When the focus is broad, there are just too many parts to cover all at once, and writers struggle to maintain coherence.

  3. The meaning of COHERENT is logically or aesthetically ordered or integrated : consistent. How to use coherent in a sentence.

  4. coherent. If an argument, set of ideas, or a plan is coherent, it is clear and carefully considered, and each part of it connects or follows in a natural or reasonable way. When she calmed down, she was more coherent (= able to speak clearly and be understood).

  5. capable of thinking and expressing yourself in a clear and consistent manner. “she was more coherent than she had been just after the accident”. synonyms: logical, lucid. rational. consistent with or based on or using reason. adjective. sticking together. “two coherent sheets”. synonyms: tenacious.

  6. Coherent definition: logically connected; consistent. See examples of COHERENT used in a sentence.

  7. If someone is coherent, they express their thoughts in a clear and calm way, so that other people can understand what they are saying. He's so calm when he answers questions in interviews. I wish I could be that coherent. Synonyms: articulate, lucid, comprehensible, intelligible More Synonyms of coherent.

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