ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED1. The earlier ppl. form was CONCOCT.] Prepared or brought to perfection by heat; digested; ripened, matured; planned, contrived; fabricated.

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1622–62.  Heylin, Cosmogr., III. (1673), 50/2. Fellows of such a perfect and concocted malice.

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c. 1645.  Howell, Lett. (1650), I. 364. The flesh that is daily dished upon our tables is but concocted grass.

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1663.  Gerbier, Counsel, B iij a. The most concocted and most pure [gold] from el Dorado.

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1781.  Cowper, Truth, 496. Maturer years shall happier stores produce, And meliorate the well concocted juice.

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1818.  Jas. Mill, Brit. India, I. II. vi. 219. An heterogeneous stream of the concocted juices of various trees and plants.

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1840.  G. S. Faber, Regen., 174. No concocted fable or mere ecclesiastical romance.

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