v. Obs. rare. [f. COM- + PRODUCE.] trans. To produce together (with).
c. 1630. Jackson, Creed, VI. iv. Wks. V. 227. Nor was it comproduced or concreated with them but created in them after they were made.
1674. Hickman, Quinquart. Hist. (ed. 2), 118. He is as truly the cause of what is comproduced and concreated, as of what is produced and created.
So † Comproduction, production in combination, joint product; † Comproductive a., productive in combination with another; also as sb.
1658. Sir T. Browne, Gard. Cyrus, iii. 46. In what diminutives the Plastick principle lodgeth, is exemplified in Seeds, wherein the greater mass affords so little Comproduction.
1686. Goad, Celest. Bodies, II. iv. 212. Comets being the Com-Productions of those Superiour Causes which are the Authors of the aforesaid Evils. Ibid., I. xii. 46. They also have a certain dependance on Warmth, as a Comproductive at least.