Citations:æquiponderant

Adjective: obsolete form of equiponderant

 * 1730, Edward Saul, An Hiſtorical and Philoſophical Account of the Barometer, or Weather‐Glass, page #36:
 * Becauſe, agreeably to the Laws of Hydroſtaſticks, where two Bodies of unequal Bulk, are æquiponderant in one Medium, they will loſe their Equilibrium, when they come to be weigh’d in another.
 * 1815, Walter Scott, Waverley, Volume I., Chapter XVI., page #130:
 * ‘ It did not indeed,’ he said, ‘ become them, as had occurred in late instances, to propone their prosapia, lineage which rested for the most part on the vain and foun rhimes of their Seannachies or Bhairds, as æquiponderant with the evidence of ancient charters and royal grants of antiquity, conferred upon distinguished houses in the low country by divers Scotish monarchs ;