a. rare. [f. FRAGMENT, after commentitious or the like.] = FRAGMENTARY.

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1827.  J. S. Mill, in Bentham, Rationale Jud. Evid., III. 573. The papers from which the above remarks on the aberrations of English law have been compiled, were written by Mr. Bentham at different times, and left by him in a very incomplete and fragmentitious state.

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1837.  Harris, Great Teacher, 404. Possessed with the idea of God, he is enamored of all he meets with that is beautiful and good: but instead of resting in any fragmentitious excellence, it only sends him in thought to the great Archetype, with whom, by an instinctive act of the mind, he compares it and so estimates its worth.

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