a. [f. prec. + -ICAL, after typical.] Of the nature of or pertaining to an antitype; fulfilling what is typical.
1641. Bp. Mountagu, Acts & Mon., 493. Not any temporall, and, therefore, but typicall, regality but a spirituall, eternall, antitypicall regality.
1684. Charnock, Attrib. God (1834), II. 681. God smelled a sweet savour from Noahs sacrifice, not from the beasts offered, but the antitypical sacrifice represented.
1860. Ellicott, Life of our Lord, vii. 347, note. An antitypical reference to the ceremony of the Scape-Goat.