v. rare. [f. UNIT sb. + -IZE.] trans. To form into a unit; to unite or make one.
1849. [implied in next].
1860. Worcester (citing Ch. Reg.).
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.
So Unitized, Unitizing ppl. adjs.
1849. Sears, Regeneration, II. xii. (1859), 239. The governing and unitizing principle of all endeavour.
1873. Contemp. Rev., XXI. 269. The rapid immediate advance of unitized societies.