pa. pple. and ppl. a. Sc. Also 8 læsed. [f. L. læs-us, pa. pple. of ladĕre to hurt + -ED1.] That has suffered LESION, q.v.; damaged, injured.

1

16[?].  in Hector, Judicial Rec. (1876), 100 (E. D. D.). To assythe the sd John Barr as the pairty lesed.

2

1708.  Chamberlayne, St. Gt. Brit., II. II. vi. (1743), 385. If the ordinary be clear to pronounce an Interloquitor to the dissatisfaction of either party, he who thinks himself lesed, may get Redress.

3

1724.  Dr. Houstoun, in Phil. Trans., XXXIII. 12. The Elasticity of these læsed Parts was … impair’d.

4

1741.  A. Monro, Anat. of Nerves (ed. 3), 34. The lesed Part of the Body.

5