v. [f. as prec. + -IZE: cf. naturalize.] trans. To make connatural, or of like or agreeable nature: see CONNATURAL 2, 3.

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1668.  Howe, Bless. Righteous, Wks. (1834), 198/2. This will connaturalize them to a region of glory.

2

1681.  J. Scott, Chr. Life (ed. 3), 23. So attempered and connaturaliz’d to the Objects of Heaven.

3

1888.  Harper’s Mag., April, 740. Whether affiliated by blood, connaturalized by caste, or simply interassociated by traditional sympathies.

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