Citations:accorporate


 * Latin ; +
 * (obsolete) To unite; to attach.


 * 1644, John Milton, The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce:
 * To pursue the allegory, Custom being but a mere face, rests not in her unaccomplishment, until by secret inclination she accorporate herself with Error
 * 1959, Leonard Nathanson, The Strategy of Truth: A Study of Sir Thomas Brown's Religio Medici, page 95, quoting Milton:
 * Lamenting &quot;that custom still is silently received for the best instructor,&quot; he fashions an allegory in which custom &quot;accorporates&quot; with error. The two support each other and &quot;between them would persecute and chase away all truth&quot;
 * 2015, Seth Lobis, The Virtue of Sympathy: Magic, Philosophy, and Literature in Seventeenth-century England, Yale University Press (ISBN 9780300192032), page 150, quoting Milton:
 * Moved by the “secret inclination” of sympathy, Adam insists on “accorporating” himself with Eve; they will fall as one fallen body. Although Eve&#39;s birth required Adam to sacrifice “cordial spirits,” her presence fills him