ppl. a. [f. prec. + -ED.] Burnt by cautery; seared.
1603. Florio, Montaigne, II. v. (1632), 203. A guiltie-cauterized conscience.
1651. Biggs, New Disp., ¶ 243. The cauterized or wounded part.
1655. R. Younge, Agst. Drunkards, 6. A man shall never hear of an habituated, infatuated, incorrigible, cauterized Drunkard, that is reclaimed with age.