a. rare. [f. LOAN v. and sb. + -ED.] a. Stopped with ‘loam’ or earth. b. In deep-loamed, having a great depth of loam.

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1819.  Keats, Isabella, xxxv. The forest tomb Had … taken the soft lute From his lorn voice, and past his loamed ears Had made a miry channel for his tears.

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1900.  Contemp. Rev., Sept., 347. If, however, I cast it [seed] on a deep-loamed field and a luxuriant crop springs up, the soil of the field is not the cause of the crop, it is only one of the necessary conditions of its growth. The sower is the true cause.

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