a. Also 3 lyured, 4 liuerd, lyuered, 6 leueryd. [f. LIVER sb.1 + -ED2.]
† 1. Coagulated, clotted. Livered sea = liver sea (LIVER sb.1 7); in quot. applied to the Red Sea.
c. 1275. XI Pains of Hell, 47, in O. E. Misc., 148. Snov and is and lyured blod.
1297. R. Glouc. (Rolls), 925. Vor þo þe folc of israhel moyses wiþ him nom & ladde hom out of egipt in to þe liuerede [v.r. reed(e, rede] se.
a. 1300. Cursor M., 6506. Vr godd þis ilk es he þat brogh(t) vs thoru þe liuerd se [Trin. þe rede see].
13[?]. Minor Poems fr. Vernon MS. (E.E.T.S.), 645/236. Þer was no thyng bot lyuered blode.
14[?]. Siege Jerusalem (E.E.T.S.), 2/29. Þe lyppe lyþ on a lumpe lyuered on þe cheke.
2. Of bread: Heavy. Now dial.
1688. R. Holme, Armoury, III. 317/1. Bakers Terms Livered, tough Bread.
1847. Halliwell, Livered, heavy, or underbaked. South.
3. With prefixed adj.: Having a liver of a certain kind. (See also lily-, pigeon-, white-livered.)
1628. Ford, Lovers Mel., III. ii. What a greene sicknesse-liuerd Boy is this!