Citations:locuplete

Adjective: "possessing wealth; rich"

 * 1663 — William Clark, Marciano; Or, The Discovery: A Tragi-comedy, Act II, Scene 5, page 10
 * he is most locuplete in both argentary and frumentary rents
 * 1910 — anonymous, "The Point of View", "Frugal Hosptality", Scribner's Magazine (April), page 123
 * And who can possibly have forgotten, in Thackeray's “Book of Snobs,” the dinner which the frugal but humorous Gray gave to the locuplete Goldmore
 * 1933 — Chas E. Fisher, "The Locomotives of The Boston & Maine Railroad", The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin (April), page 14
 * The luxury of its appointments cajoled New Yorkers who were sufficiently locuplete to meet its tariff

Adjective: "having an abundance of something; plentiful"

 * 1794 — Mark Anthony Meilan (translator), The Adventures of Telemachus: An Epic Poem from the French of Fenelon with Alterations, Volume 2, page 367 (originally published in French as "Les aventures de Télémaque" by François de Salignac de la Mothe-Fénelon, 1699)
 * A city fill'd With workmen in each art luxuriant ſkill'd, And locuplete in gold,