v. intr. To subsist together, or in combination. Hence Consubsisting ppl. a.

1

1768–74.  Tucker, Lt. Nat. (1852), I. 552. Some who hold two consubsisting wills, an active and an elective. Ibid., I. 555. An elective power consubsisting with our power of volition.

2

1797.  Monthly Mag., III. Sup. 521/1. Natural productions consubsist in the intellectual light of the father.

3