What does “cohort” mean?
cohort
Oh, this is a good one!
A "cohort" is basically a group of people who share something in common — like they started something at the same time or went through the same experience together.
The original meaning is actually from old Roman times — it was a group of soldiers. But today we use it way more casually.
Like if you and your classmates all started university in the same year, you'd say "we're in the same cohort." Or a doctor might say "we studied a cohort of patients who all had the same illness." In a work setting, someone might say "my cohort of new employees all trained together last spring."
It can also just mean a close friend or teammate — like "he and his cohorts showed up to the party."
So basically, it's a group of people connected by a shared experience or time.
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