v. [see CO-, and COMMINGLE.] To mingle together. Also Co-mingling vbl. sb.
1602. Shaks., Ham., III. ii. 74. Blest are those Whose Blood and Iudgement are so well co-mingled [Qq. comeddled].
1845. Rose Ellen Hendriks, The Spanish Girls Revenge, ii. in The Astrologers Daughter, III. 209. A dream of the future flashes before me, at the very moment when my smiles ought to co-mingle with the bridal pair.
1856. Fonblanque, Life & Labours (1874), 324. To prevent any confusion or co-mingling.
1862. Shirley, Nugæ Crit., viii. 348. It is a strange co-mingling; every sort and condition of men, and each buried after his own fashion.