ppl. a. [f. prec. vb. + -ED.] Gathered into a ball, rounded.

1

1668.  Howe, Bless. Righteous, Wks. (1834), 212/1. An impure mass of conglobated darkness.

2

1784.  Twamley, Dairying, 147. The conglobated, or round Leaf.

3

1814.  Wordsw., Excursion, III. 981. Conglobated bubbles undissolved.

4

  † b.  Phys. = CONGLOBATE a. 2. Obs.

5

1676.  Phil. Trans., XI. 772. The Lymphaticks … he will have to arise from conglobated glandules.

6

1701.  Grew, Cosm. Sacra, I. v. § 21. The Testicle, as is said, is one large Conglobated Gland, consisting of soft Fibers or Vessels, all in one Convolution.

7