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well.... a pll is never really pure analog - somewhere in the system you need to compare the phase, which gives a discrete-time voltage. this voltage may be a sine wave, but it is "chopped" in a digital fashion. sum all these chopped chunks of sinewave into a cap, and you creates a voltage proportional to your phase difference between the signal (sine) and master (chopper)
here's a 565 datasheet, it even includes a simple schematic you could build if you like bjt's. this is about as pure analog as you can get - specifically, the phase comparator is a gilbert multiplier rather than an xor or dff implementation. so if you compare a sinewave to a squarewave, you will get a chopped sine output rather than just 1-0. if you compare two sines, you will get complex sine output, etc etc.
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