[ad. L. conduplicātiōn-em, n. of action from conduplicāre: see above.] A doubling; a repetition.

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[1589.  Puttenham, Eng. Poesie, III. xix. (Arb.), 209. That which the Greekes call symploche, the Latines complexio, or conduplicatio.]

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1619.  Donne, Serm., cxlvi. V. 619. As God expresses the bitterness of death in an Ingemination (morte morietur) in a Conduplication of deaths—he shall die and die twice over.

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1644.  Bulwer, Chiron., 59. When the voyce is reiterate by conduplication.

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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.

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