释义 |
▪ I. † concreate, a. Obs. [ad. L. concreāt-us (Vulg.), f. con- together + creātus created.] Created together; coeval in creation. (Cf. connate.)
1677Gale Crt. Gentiles II. iv. 51 This Divine Law..was concreate and connatural as to Adam. 1668Howe Bless. Righteous (1825) 41 Man was made at first with a concreate Similitude to God. ▪ II. concreate, v. Now rare or Obs.|ˌkɒnkriːˈeɪt| [f. L. concreāt-, ppl. stem of concreāre: see prec. and -ate3. (F. has concréer ‘to engender’.)] trans. To create together. (Mostly in pa. pple.)
1625A. Gill Sacr. Philos. i. 96 When water, the first matier of all things, was created..with that water..was concreated all manner of formes. 1682H. More Annot. Glanvill's Lux O. 20 To create a Soul, is to concreate the qualities or properties of it. 1748Phil. Trans. XLV. 629 That the vital essential Stamina of every Plant and Animal were really concreated with the Universe. 1858Bushnell Nat. & Supernat. iv. (1864) 112 We get all the furniture of our mind..save what we have as it were concreated in us. Hence concreˈated ppl. a.
1627–77Feltham Resolves ii. iii. 163 This, as the concreated Rule with Man..the Apostle calls the Royal Law. a1711Ken Hymnotheo Poet. Wks. 1721 III. 201 On their con-created Harps to play. 1876J. G. Pilkington Confess. St. August. 391 Concreated matter. |