a. rare. [f. COL- + LOCAL. Cf. following words.] Of, belonging to, or occupying, the same place with another.
1813. W. Taylor, Eng. Synonyms (1856), 64. As it is esteemed a perfection in English writing to construct an antithesis with words of a collocal origin, it is become usual to oppose dale to hill, which is also a word of Saxon descent.
1862. F. Hall, Hindu Philos. Syst., 170. When an affection of the internal organ and the object of that affection become collocal, the Brahma of the affection and that of the object coalesce into one.