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).

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1533.  More, To Henry VIII., Wks. 1557, 1424/1. Of your mere abundant goodnes heped and accumilate vpon me.

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1605.  Bacon, Adv. Learn., I. 11. Socrates … was made a person heroycall, and his memorie accumulate with honors diuine and humane.

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1667.  H. More, Div. Dial. (1713), V. xxix. 498. A very accumulate Completion of that Prediction.

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1704.  T. Hearne, Duct. Hist. (ed. 3), I. 223. It was an accumulate Number, or Council of Priests, to whom ordinary appeals came.

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1821.  Southey, Vis. Judgm., Wks. X. 225. The blast with lightning and thunder Vollying aright and aleft amid the accumulate blackness.

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1878.  B. Taylor, Pr. Deukalion, II. iv. 80. The accumulate store saved from the wrecks of Time.

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