v. rare. [f. UNIT sb. + -IZE.] trans. To form into a unit; to unite or make one.

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1849.  [implied in next].

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1860.  Worcester (citing Ch. Reg.).

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1893.  J. Pulsford, Loyalty to Christ, II. 320. [Christ] is the head of every principality and power … to subdue all things to Himself, and to unitise highest and lowest.

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  So Unitized, Unitizing ppl. adjs.

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1849.  Sears, Regeneration, II. xii. (1859), 239. The governing and unitizing principle of all endeavour.

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1873.  Contemp. Rev., XXI. 269. The rapid immediate advance of unitized societies.

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