incocted
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Compare concoct.
Adjective[edit]
incocted (comparative more incocted, superlative most incocted)
- (obsolete) Indigestible; also, raw.
- 1645, Jos[eph] Hall, “Sect[ion] XII. Consideration of the Benefits of Poverty.”, in The Remedy of Discontentment: Or, A Treatise of Contentation in whatsoever Condition: […], London: […] J. G. for Nath[aniel] Brooks, […], published 1652, →OCLC, page 61:
- Meales, uſually ſavvced vvith a healthfull hunger, vvherein no incocted Crudities oppreſſe Nature, and cheriſh diſeaſe: […]