a. [Fr.; pa. pple. of frapper in sense of to ice (drinks).] Iced, cooled.
1848. Longf., in Life (1891), II. 121. A warm morning; frappé at noon with an east wind.
1870. Lowell, Study Wind., A Good Word for Winter, 47. The air you drink is frappé, all its grosser particles precipitated, and the dregs of your blood with them.