a. [f. as prec. + -IC.] Affected with or characterized by leucophlegmacy.

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1668.  Culpepper & Cole, Barthol. Anat., II. vii. 110. Leucophlegmatick persons.

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1732.  Arbuthnot, Rules of Diet, 363. Old Age attended with a … leucophlegmatic Constitution.

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1771.  Smollett, Humph. Cl., 20 April (1815). He told me … my case was dropsical, or, as he called it, leuco-phlegmatic.

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1839.  Blackw. Mag., XLV. 356. The vast expanse of his leucophlegmatic countenance.

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1861.  T. J. Graham, Pract. Med., 185. A leucophlegmatic temperament.

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  Hence Leucophlegmatical a. = prec.

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1658.  Rowland, trans. Moufet’s Theat. Ins., 988. They hurt not dropsie persons, nor such as are leucophlegmatical.

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