v. [f. as prec. + -IZE.] trans. To endow with faculty (see FACULTY 1 c). Hence Facultized ppl. a., endowed with faculty; practical, shrewd.

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1872.  R. F. Littledale, The Religious Education of Women, in The Contemporary Review, XX. June, 13. We shall more and more need what the Americans call ‘facultized’ women. Not merely capable women, educated women, clever women, but such as have had capacity trained into practical efficiency and decisiveness.

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