How to Use coauthor in a Sentence

coauthor

noun
  • Edmunds, one of the paper’s coauthors, says in a press release.
    National Geographic, 18 June 2018
  • Ross, coauthor of the textbook Transplantation Ethics, doesn’t see it that way.
    Tom Avril, Philly.com, 13 June 2018
  • Fern Spike Field and his coauthors compiled a mass of evidence from disparate sources to help support their argument.
    National Geographic, 24 May 2018
  • Shrinking the capsule to a normal pill size could be achieved by combining its three electronic chips, said coauthor Phillip Nadeu.
    Carla K. Johnson, BostonGlobe.com, 24 May 2018
  • Indeed, Turvey and his coauthors found good evidence that the Yellow River lineage had taken over.
    Matt Simon, WIRED, 21 May 2018
  • The team saw the need for such a guide, says Bodine, a coauthor.
    Sheryl Estrada, Fortune, 23 Oct. 2023
  • Joshua Chu-Tan, a coauthor on the story wrote in a news release.
    Joshua Hawkins, BGR, 11 Dec. 2021
  • Guo was the lead author of two studies, and coauthor on the other two.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN, 30 Jan. 2024
  • Also at issue though, is the quality of the sources Scheele and his coauthors cite.
    George Grall, National Geographic, 19 Mar. 2020
  • In 2019, a team led by Clarke’s coauthor, Peter Fretwell, tried to automate this process.
    Claudia Geib, Smithsonian Magazine, 20 Jan. 2022
  • Kaza is coauthor of What a Waste, a massive research project detailing refuse across the globe.
    Outside Online, 7 Mar. 2019
  • Last week, Nichols filed SB 1983 with Schwertner as a coauthor.
    Philip Jankowski, Dallas News, 17 Mar. 2023
  • Smith wrote a book that included his former name as a coauthor.
    Jemma Stephenson, al, 16 June 2023
  • The discovery has confirmed what study coauthor Stephanie Dutkiewicz has long feared.
    Mark Price, Anchorage Daily News, 31 Aug. 2023
  • Eneanya was a coauthor of the 2020 study on the potential impact of using race in the kidney function equation.
    Tom Simonite, Wired, 23 Sep. 2021
  • Moniz and her coauthors found that the actual cost billed for the birth stayed mostly steady over the seven years in the study period.
    Irina Ivanova, CBS News, 8 Jan. 2020
  • David Kessler, coauthor of a seminal book on the stages of grief, says the process begins when families are told the patient will not survive.
    USA Today, 12 Mar. 2021
  • Both the bill and constitutional amendment have at least 85 coauthors, of whom six are Democrats.
    Dallas News, 14 Apr. 2023
  • Grant and his coauthor were supposed to submit the book to their publisher in March, just as the pandemic was taking hold.
    Matt Simon, Wired, 14 Oct. 2020
  • The coauthor was her Yale classmate and future husband, Ralph Cavanagh.
    Bob Egelko, SFChronicle.com, 11 Jan. 2021
  • Sanford Gordon of New York University: a coauthor of the new study.
    Robert Verbruggen, National Review, 10 June 2019
  • Hellmuth and her coauthors paint a stark portrait of the toll climate change is taking on the world’s most vulnerable.
    Elizabeth Rayne, Ars Technica, 14 Nov. 2023
  • But Gozashti, Corbett-Detig and their coauthors found the opposite.
    Jake Buehler, Quanta Magazine, 30 Mar. 2023
  • By answering the conjecture, the coauthors of the new work have placed a rough-cut restriction on the spaces in which higher-rank lattices can act.
    Quanta Magazine, 23 Oct. 2018
  • Jim Kouzes, coauthor of the classic bestseller The Leadership Challenge, backs up his opinions with decades of research.
    Rodger Dean Duncan, Forbes, 21 Feb. 2023
  • Barbara Haya, a coauthor of the CarbonPlan study, said the state’s approach could work, but must be closely monitored.
    Lisa Song, and James Temple, ProPublica, 10 May 2021
  • Hayne is a coauthor on a new study published this month in The Planetary Science Journal about potential sources of water on the moon.
    Ashley Strickland, CNN, 27 May 2022
  • Testing by Fernandez and her coauthor, Amy Mueller, offers some broad hints.
    Joe Lindsey, Outside Online, 30 Sep. 2020
  • Berndt worked with an international group of 35 coauthors on the paper.
    Eric Berger, Ars Technica, 4 Oct. 2023
  • The coauthors, a group of dental and public health researchers, cautioned against overstating the oral-systemic health connection.
    Lola Butcher, Smithsonian Magazine, 29 Mar. 2024

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'coauthor.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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