consort       
 verb [ I + adv/prep ] uk/kənˈsɔːt/ us/kənˈsɔːrt/
 (尤指与品行不好的人)勾结;厮混
to spend a lot of time in the company of a particular group of people, especially people whose character is not approved of
  They claimed he had been consorting with drug dealers. 他们称他与毒品贩子相勾结。 
 consort       
noun [ C ] uk/ˈkɒn.sɔːt/ us/ˈkɑːn.sɔːrt/
 (尤指统治者的)配偶
a wife or husband, especially of a ruler
  The Emperor Napoleon III and his consort lived sedately in an apartment in the Tuileries.
 When her husband was crowned she became Queen Consort.
 Philip was Elizabeth's prince consort.
 - More examples
 - The young Wolfgang Mozart played to the Empress Maria Theresia and her consort at the Schönbrunn palace in Vienna.
 - Maria Teresa was the daughter of King Philip IV of Spain and queen consort of Louis XIV of France.
 - In December 1861 Albert, the Prince Consort, died at the age of forty-two.
 - Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, was recognized as king consort and was referred to as King Henry during his short and unhappy marriage.