[ad. L. conduplicātiōn-em, n. of action from conduplicāre: see above.] A doubling; a repetition.
[1589. Puttenham, Eng. Poesie, III. xix. (Arb.), 209. That which the Greekes call symploche, the Latines complexio, or conduplicatio.]
1619. Donne, Serm., cxlvi. V. 619. As God expresses the bitterness of death in an Ingemination (morte morietur) in a Conduplication of deathshe shall die and die twice over.
1644. Bulwer, Chiron., 59. When the voyce is reiterate by conduplication.
1864. J. Brown, Lett., in W. Knight, Princ. Shairp (1888), 233. If the public were a vast conduplication of me there could be no fear.