ppl. a. [f. WARM v. + -ED1.] Made warm. a. lit.

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1597.  A. M., trans. Guillemeau’s Fr. Chirurg., 28/1. With a warmed table napikinne, rubbe the insyde of the arme.

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1679.  Trapham, Disc. Health Jamaica, 146. Dissolution in Wine or Broth or other warmed Liquids.

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1820.  Keats, Eve St. Agnes, xxvi. She … Unclasps her warmed jewels one by one.

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1895.  S. Crane, Red Badge, v. He grasped his canteen and took a long swallow of the warmed water.

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  b.  fig.

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1690.  Locke, Hum. Und., IV. xix. § 7. This I take to be properly Enthusiasm … rising from the Conceits of a warm’d or over-weening Brain.

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1854.  Patmore, Angel in Ho., Betrothal, 141. And all thank God with their warmed wits.

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1883.  Miss Broughton, Belinda, I. vi. The sense of physical emptiness, that … no warmed passions redeem.

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