a. and sb. Obs. [app. f. CONFORMITAN, with suffix as in protestant, etc.)
A. adj. Yielding compliance; conforming.
1632. D. Lupton, Lond. & C. carbonadoed, etc., in Halliw., Charac. Bks. (1857), 268. Shee is no Puritaine, for her buildings are now Conformitant; nor shee is no Separatist, for they are united together.
1641. Bernard, Short View Prelat. Ch. Eng., 29. The conformitant Priests (so they now are called) which properly belong to this Prelaticall Church.
B. sb. = CONFORMIST.
1621. Bp. Mountagu, Diatribæ, 85. At home we haue the Factionist or the Conformitant.
1628. W. Scot, Apol. Narr. (1846), 314. A faction of Conformitants in Edinburgh engrossed the Government.
1662. S. Fisher, Answ. Bp. Gauden (1679), 4. The Bishop in the self-same Work wherein he labours earnestly to bring all men to be Conformitants to him, is found a most egregious Nonconformitant to himself.