ppl. a. [f. CLARIFY v. + -ED1.] Made clear; cleared; freed from impurity, defecated, refined, etc.; † glorified, transfigured; see the vb.
c. 1430. 15th C. Cookery Bks., 12. A potte with Sugre and clarifiyd hony.
1509. Hawes, Examp. Virtue, v. 50. Her chaumbre was glased with byrall clarefyed.
1562. Bulleyn, Bk. Simples, 10 a. Put in freshe clarified Butter.
1577. trans. Bullingers Decades (1592), 88. Clarified bodies neede not foode or nourishment.
1601. B. Jonson, Poetaster, IV. v. The Crier of the Court hath too clarified a Voice.
1662. South, Serm. Gen. i. 27 (1715), IV. 60. The Dictates of a clarified Understanding.
1662. J. Sparrow, trans. Behmens Rem. Wks., Apol. Perfection, 149. With clarified, Transfigured, or Glorified bodies.
1826. J. F. Browne, in Hone, Every-day Bk., II. 1215. Written with a common clarified pen.
a. 1845. Barham, Ingol. Leg., Wedding-day. Char, potted with clarified butter and spices.
1846. Hare, Mission Comf. (1850), 283. The intuitions of the clarified Reason.
1886. Fairbairn, City of God, IV. ii. 340. A love clarified, etherealized, which jealousy cannot touch.