Defn: Incorporating or tending to incorporate; as, the incorporative languages (as of the Basques, North American Indians, etc. ) which run a whole phrase into one word. History demonstrates that incorporative unions are solid and permanent; but that a federal union is weak. W. Belsham.
INCORPORATOR
In*cor"po*ra`tor, n.
Defn: One of a number of persons who gets a company incorporated; one of the original members of a corporation.
INCORPOREAL In`cor*po"re*al, a. Etym: [Pref. in- not + corporeal: cf. L. incorporeus. Cf. Incorporal.]
1. Not corporeal; not having a material body or form; not consisting of matter; immaterial. Thus incorporeal spirits to smaller forms Reduced their shapes immense. Milton. Sense and perception must necessarily proceed from some incorporeal substance within us. Bentley.
2. (Law)
Defn: Existing only in contemplation of law; not capable of actual visible seizin or possession; not being an object of sense; intangible; — opposed to corporeal. Incorporeal hereditament. See under Hereditament.
Syn.
— Immaterial; unsubstantial; bodiless; spiritual.
INCORPOREALISM
In`cor*po"re*al*ism, n.
Defn: Existence without a body or material form; immateriality.
Cudworth.