? Obs. [n. of action f. prec.: see -ATION.] Patching together; concr. anything patched up, a heterogeneous combination.

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1640.  G. Watts, trans. Bacon’s Adv. Learn., 452. Performed … more truly, by a new Text, than by such a Consarcination.

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1829.  Hogg, in Blackw. Mag., XXV. 741. If the consarcination of their conjugality is taken into account.

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1853.  F. Saunders, Salad for the Solitary, A Word Prel. 1. Our Salad—a consarcination of many good things for the literary palate.

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