v. Obs. [f. L. cicurat- ppl. stem of cicur-āre to tame (f. cicur tame).]
trans. To tame, to domesticate; transf. to render mild or harmless. Hence Cicurated ppl. a.
1606. Breton, Ourania, H ij a. The Rauen if she be Cicurated.
1646. Sir T. Browne, Pseud. Ep., 378. Poysons so refracted, cicurated, and subdued, as not to make good their destructive malignities.
1660. H. More, Myst. Godl., V. viii. 155. A cicurated Beast.
1702. C. Mather, Magn. Chr., II. (1852), App. 216. Nor did he only try to cicurate the Indians.
1710. T. Fuller, Pharm. Extemp., 144. This broken and divided it [the Rosin] is perfectly cicurated.