a. [f. med.L. concubīnāri-us + -AN.] = next.
1838. G. S. Faber, Inq. Hist. Vallenses, 475. The women who shocked the concubinarian purity of the Romish Priesthood.
1855. Milman, Lat. Chr. (1864), IX. XIV. i. 37. The number is sufficiently appalling; probably it comprehends, without much distinction, the married and concubinarian, as well as looser clergy.