Now rare or Obs. [f. L. concreāt-, ppl. stem of concreāre: see prec. and -ATE3. (F. has concréer ‘to engender.’)] trans. To create together. (Mostly in pa. pple.)

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1625.  Gil, Sacr. Philos., I. 96. When water, the first matier of all things, was created … with that water … was concreated all manner of formes.

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1682.  H. More, Annot. Glanvill’s Lux O., 20. To create a Soul, is to concreate the qualities or properties of it.

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1748.  Phil. Trans., XLV. 629. That the vital essential Stamina of every Plant and Animal were really concreated with the Universe.

4

1858.  Bushnell, Nat. & Supernat., iv. (1864), 112. We get all the furniture of our mind … save what we have as it were concreated in us.

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  Hence Concreated ppl. a.

6

1627–72.  Feltham, Resolves, II. iii. 163. This, as the concreated Rule with Man … the Apostle calls the Royal Law.

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a. 1711.  Ken, Hymnotheo, Poet. Wks. 1721, III. 201. On their con-created Harps to play.

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1876.  J. G. Pilkington, Confess. St. August., 391. Concreated matter.

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