ppl. a. [f. AGUE v. + -ED.] Affected as with ague; ague-shaken.

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1607.  Shaks., Coriol., I. iv. 38. Faces pale With flight and agued feare.

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1787.  T. Jefferson, Writings (1859), II. 304. They calculate on the spirit of the nation, and not on the agued hand which guides its movements.

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1819.  Crabbe, T. of Hall, XII. 680. The flame, That warm’d his agued limbs.

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