adv. [f. prec. + -LY2.] In a concretive manner; concretely, in the concrete.
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.
1656. Hardy, Serm., John xiv. (1865), 84/2. Guilt abstractively considered, is not taken away concretively considered, it is taken away.