ppl. a. [f. CLARIFY v. + -ED1.] Made clear; cleared; freed from impurity, defecated, refined, etc.; † glorified, transfigured; see the vb.

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c. 1430.  15th C. Cookery Bks., 12. A potte with Sugre and clarifiyd hony.

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1509.  Hawes, Examp. Virtue, v. 50. Her chaumbre was glased with byrall clarefyed.

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1562.  Bulleyn, Bk. Simples, 10 a. Put in freshe clarified Butter.

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1577.  trans. Bullinger’s Decades (1592), 88. Clarified bodies neede not foode or nourishment.

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1601.  B. Jonson, Poetaster, IV. v. The Crier of the Court hath too clarified a Voice.

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1662.  South, Serm. Gen. i. 27 (1715), IV. 60. The Dictates of a clarified Understanding.

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1662.  J. Sparrow, trans. Behmen’s Rem. Wks., Apol. Perfection, 149. With clarified, Transfigured, or Glorified bodies.

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1826.  J. F. Browne, in Hone, Every-day Bk., II. 1215. Written … with a common clarified pen.

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a. 1845.  Barham, Ingol. Leg., Wedding-day. Char, potted with clarified butter and spices.

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1846.  Hare, Mission Comf. (1850), 283. The intuitions of the clarified Reason.

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1886.  Fairbairn, City of God, IV. ii. 340. A love clarified, etherealized, which jealousy cannot touch.

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