a. rare. [ad. L. confātāl-is (Cicero), f. con- + fātum fate: see FATAL.] Subject to or sharing in the same fate.

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1655.  Stanley, Hist. Philos. (1701), 335. It is no less determined by fate that you shall have a Physician, than that you shall recover. They are confatal.

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1858.  Oxford Ess., 99. The portent and the thing to be signified were ‘confatal.’

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