also 6 accumulat, accumilate. [ad. L. accumulāt-us, pa. pple. of accumulā-re to heap up; f. ac- = ad- to + cumulā-re to heap; f. cumul-us a heap.] Heaped up by additions; aggregate. Formerly both adj. and pple.; as pple. now replaced by ACCUMULATED).
1533. More, To Henry VIII., Wks. 1557, 1424/1. Of your mere abundant goodnes heped and accumilate vpon me.
1605. Bacon, Adv. Learn., I. 11. Socrates was made a person heroycall, and his memorie accumulate with honors diuine and humane.
1667. H. More, Div. Dial. (1713), V. xxix. 498. A very accumulate Completion of that Prediction.
1704. T. Hearne, Duct. Hist. (ed. 3), I. 223. It was an accumulate Number, or Council of Priests, to whom ordinary appeals came.
1821. Southey, Vis. Judgm., Wks. X. 225. The blast with lightning and thunder Vollying aright and aleft amid the accumulate blackness.
1878. B. Taylor, Pr. Deukalion, II. iv. 80. The accumulate store saved from the wrecks of Time.