ppl. a. [f. AGUE v. + -ED.] Affected as with ague; ague-shaken.
1607. Shaks., Coriol., I. iv. 38. Faces pale With flight and agued feare.
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.
1819. Crabbe, T. of Hall, XII. 680. The flame, That warmd his agued limbs.