Obs. [n. of action from CORPORIFY: see -ATION.] The action or process of giving a body to, or of embodying; the fact of being embodied, embodiment.

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1641.  French, Distill., v. (1651), 108. A substance very dry, vitall, and radicall, having in it the beginning of corporification.

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1658.  R. White, trans. Digby’s Powd. Symp. (1660), 142. It is no other then a corporification of the universall spirit.

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1864.  E. B. Penny, in Athenæum, No. 1928. 462/1. That higher corporification … Eternal Nature.

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