a. [f. prec. + -ICAL, after typical.] Of the nature of or pertaining to an antitype; fulfilling what is typical.

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1641.  Bp. Mountagu, Acts & Mon., 493. Not any temporall, and, therefore, but typicall, regality … but a spirituall, eternall, antitypicall regality.

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1684.  Charnock, Attrib. God (1834), II. 681. God smelled a sweet savour from Noah’s sacrifice, not from the beasts offered, but the antitypical sacrifice represented.

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1860.  Ellicott, Life of our Lord, vii. 347, note. An antitypical reference to the ceremony of the Scape-Goat.

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