v. Obs. rare. [f. COM- + PRODUCE.] trans. To produce together (with).

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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.

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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.

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  So † Comproduction, production in combination, joint product; † Comproductive a., productive in combination with another; also as sb.

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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.

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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.

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