All 22 Uses of
coincidence
in
The Da Vinci Code
- Their agreement was too great for coincidence.†
Chpt 2 *
- A fortunate coincidence.†
Chpt 3
- Langdon was feeling anything but fortunate, and coincidence was a concept he did not entirely trust.†
Chpt 3
- Obviously there can be no coincidence that all of the numbers Saunière wrote on the floor belong to Fibonacci's famous sequence.†
Chpt 11-12
- Fine, if there is no coincidence, would you tell me why Jacques Saunière chose to do this.†
Chpt 11-12
- Collet could barely conceive of the unfortunate coincidence that called in a young woman to decipher a code written by a dead family member.†
Chpt 17-18
- That can't be coincidence.†
Chpt 19-20
- "PHI's ubiquity in nature," Langdon said, killing the lights, "clearly exceeds coincidence, and so the ancients assumed the number PHI must have been preordained by the Creator of the universe.†
Chpt 19-20
- It's far too coincidental that this supposedly random account number could be rearranged to form the Fibonacci sequence.†
Chpt 43-44
- The coincidental number hit him harder than the fact that he was the prime suspect.†
Chpt 49-50
- It seemed too unlikely to be a coincidence.†
Chpt 49-50
- Glaring in the center of the painting was the unquestionable outline of an enormous, flawlessly formed letter M. "A bit too perfect for coincidence, wouldn't you say?†
Chpt 57-58
- The Little Mermaid was a spellbinding tapestry of spiritual symbols so specifically goddess-related that they could not be coincidence.†
Chpt 61-62
- Of course, the Little Mermaid's flowing red hair was certainly no coincidence either.†
Chpt 61-62
- He prayed this was some kind of bizarre coincidence, but he knew it could not be.†
Chpt 63-64
- A cruel coincidence, my friend.†
Chpt 67-68
- Coincidence has nothing to do with it, Langdon knew.†
Chpt 67-68
- Although Langdon could not imagine the Judicial Police tangled up in the Holy Grail, he sensed too much coincidence tonight to disregard Fache as a possible accomplice.†
Chpt 81-82
- Rémy smiled, seeming to have no trouble with the apparent coincidence of Langdon's chosen refuge.†
Chpt 83-84
- Langdon knew it was no coincidence that the word minstrel and minister shared an etymological root.†
Chpt 95-96
- It was no coincidence that Teabing launched his plan into action on the same night Langdon was scheduled to meet Jacques Saunière.†
Chpt 101-102
- No coincidence there.†
Chpt 103-104
Definition:
-
(coincidence) a situation where two things happened at the same time or in the same way by chance even though it was unlikely
(for example, if two students in the same class met by accident while visiting another country)