venomed

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

venom +‎ -ed

Adjective[edit]

venomed (comparative more venomed, superlative most venomed)

  1. Containing venom; laced with or steeped in venom.
    • 1857, Henry A. Murray, Lands of the Slave and the Free[1]:
      Indifferent usually to luxury, he here exhausts his ingenuity to obtain it; shrinking usually from the touch of a nigger as from the venomed tooth of a serpent, he here is seen resigning his nose to the digital custody of that sable operator, and placing his throat at his mercy, or revelling in titillary ecstasy from his manipulations with the hog's bristles;--all this he enjoys in a semi-recumbent position, obtained from an easy chair and a high stool, wherein he lies with a steadiness which courts prolongation--life-like, yet immoveable--suggesting the idea of an Egyptian corpse newly embalmed.
    • 1880, Richard Francis Burton, Os Lusíadas, volume I, page 33:
      But now the Moormen, stalking o'er the strand / to guard the wat'ery stores the strangers need; / this, targe on arm and assegai in hand, / that, with his bended bow, and venom'd reed[.]
    • 1891, Various, Punch, Or The London Charivari, Vol. 100, April 4, 1891[2]:
      Circe's venomed flagon embruted less than doth the Lamia's wine, Than Comus' cup more perilous to sup-- As snakes are worse than swine.
    • 1921, Daniel Desmond Sheehan, Ireland Since Parnell[3]:
      As it was, fought on front and flank, with the thunders of the Church, and the ribaldry of malicious tongues to scatter their venomed darts abroad, Parnell was a doomed man.

Verb[edit]

venomed

  1. simple past and past participle of venom

Anagrams[edit]