ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED.] = CONFLATE ppl. a.
1652. Urquhart, Jewel, Wks. (1834), 254. Wherewith by such a conflated transanimation he is informed.
1885. J. R. Harris, Amer. Jrnl. Philol., VI. 35. Whence did the separate members of the conflated text arise?
1890. E. Johnson, Rise Christendom, 346. In place of history he offers nothing but the most audacious conflated myths.