Pl. -a. [a. Gr. ἀνάλογον that which is analogous, neut. sing. of adj. ἀνάλογ-ος according to due ratio, proportionate, conformable, f. ἀνά up to + λόγος account, ratio, proportion.] = ANALOGUE.

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1810.  Coleridge, Friend, VI. ii. (1867), 340. It has neither co-ordinate nor analogon.

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1851.  J. Nichol, Archit. Heavens, 232. Would we seek an analogon amid phenomena of the earth, to alternations thus stupendous?

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1869.  Farrar, Fam. Speech, iv. (1873), 116. This was the nearest analogon to such a conception as the natives could find.

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