v. Obs. [f. L. cicurat- ppl. stem of cicur-āre to tame (f. cicur tame).]

1

  trans. To tame, to domesticate; transf. to render mild or harmless. Hence Cicurated ppl. a.

2

1606.  Breton, Ourania, H ij a. The Rauen … if she be Cicurated.

3

1646.  Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., 378. Poysons … so refracted, cicurated, and subdued, as not to make good their … destructive malignities.

4

1660.  H. More, Myst. Godl., V. viii. 155. A cicurated Beast.

5

1702.  C. Mather, Magn. Chr., II. (1852), App. 216. Nor did he only try to cicurate the Indians.

6

1710.  T. Fuller, Pharm. Extemp., 144. This broken … and divided … it [the Rosin] is perfectly cicurated.

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