sb. and a. rare. [-ORY.]
A. sb. = UBIQUITARY sb. 1.
1645. Sacred Decretal, 4. Hees such an Ubiquitory, wee know not how to deale with him.
B. adj. = UBIQUITARY a. 2 b.
1643. R. O., Mans Mort., v. 33. His humanitie not being vbiquitorie, that is, everie where at once, he must be in the creation, and in some certaine place of the creation.
1841. Blackw. Mag., L. 585. The arts have claimed an ubiquitory citizenship everywhere.