adv. [f. prec. + -LY2.] In a concretive manner; concretely, in the concrete.

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1637.  Gillespie, Eng. Pop. Cerem., III. iv. 65. The phrase of the Lutherans, who say not only concretively, that the man Christ is omnipresent, but the humanity also.

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1656.  Hardy, Serm., John xiv. (1865), 84/2. Guilt abstractively considered, is not taken away … concretively considered, it is taken away.

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