Truelove88: It is you who are trying to rewrite the English language. The following is the definition you posted earlier:
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Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) - Cite This Source
co·hab·it /koʊˈhæbɪt/ Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation[koh-hab-it] Pronunciation Key - Show IPA Pronunciation
–verb (used without object)
- to live together as husband and wife, usually without legal or religious sanction.
- to live together in an intimate relationship.
- to dwell with another or share the same place, as different species of animals.
[Origin: 1520–30; < LL cohabitāre, equiv. to co- co- + habitāre to have possession, abide (freq. of habére to have, own)]
Words can have multiple meanings and context determines which meaning is operable. In all cases, it means “to share living relationship.”
In definition #1, the parties are having sex as that is the meaning of living as husband and wife w/o benefit of marriage (legal or religious). This is clearly fornification and grave matter. The Church condemns such behaviour.
In definition #2, this definition is similar to #1, is fornification, and condemned by the Church.
In definition #3, this encompasses people of the same sex, opposite sex, or more than two people living together who are NOT having sex. This is not fornification.
By the universal application of Definition #1 and #2 to two people living together regardless of whether or not they are actually having sex, two nuns or Pastor and Associate living in the same house are by definition fornicating.
It is clearly w/i proper vernacular and semantics to describe people living together and not having sex as “co-habitating.” This is not condemned by the Church.
For your information, fornification is by definition “sexual intercourse by unmarried persons”. This is condemned by the Church.
I cohabit with my wife and we don’t fornicate despite having sex. I cohabit my home with my two youngest daughters and we don’t fornicate. My sister-in-law cohabited with us for a year and we didn’t fornicate. My son’s brother-in-law is temporarily cohabitating with my son and his wife. The mother-in-law of a widower (wife/daughter had died a few years before) friend of my mom’s cohabited with him for six months as she recovered/rehabbed from major joint surgery and they did not fornicate. Not a single example is contrary to Church teaching.
How many examples do I have to give you of people cohabiting yet not fornicating to prove to you that these two words do not mean the same thing?